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Enchantment, soft, mysterious, sweet, 

Look up at the palace walls ! 
Look up at the carvings that ever meet 

In graceful arches — 

— 'Tis a Soft Venetian Song. 



The Varied Grace 



of 



Nature's Face 



by 



FLORIDA E. WATTS 




Author's Edition. 




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Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1895, by 

FLORIDA E. WATTS, ^r^^Vv^W 
in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, Washington, D. C. 



^-^th-^Jo I vu 



EV. E. CARRERAS. PRINTER ANO BINDER, 
609 N. THIRD ST., ST, LOUIS. 



In the waving green grass 

On the top of the hill, 
Where soft winds murmur 

And never are still, 
Golden-eyed daisies 

Rear their white crowns, 
Graceful and dainty, 

Far from the towns. 

A feeling of happiness 

Steals o'er my mind 
When, in the waving grass, 

Daisies I find. 
Many sweet memories 

Round your stems cling, 
Of words, thoughts and day-dreams, 

Of old songs you sing. 



©GNTENJTi,. 



The Pearl and the Shell 

The Voice of Nature .... 

Rome ...... 

Strings of Amethysts .... 

Wild-Grape Blossoms 

Inspiration 

Invitation ..... 

A Drowsy Afternoon .... 

An Answer ..... 

The Rhone ...... 

Isle of Capri, Bay of Naples 

Moonlight ...... 

The Beginning of Autumn (A Memory of Geneva) 
The Rose and the Sand (Farewell to Cairo) 
Recollection ..... 

Snow Music 

Spring Flowers 

The Old Ice-Witch 

Cairo Streets . . . . 

August .... 

Fireflies .... 

Mozart, " The King of Tones " 
Milan Cathedral (Interior) 
Milan Cathedral (Exterior) 
To a Baby Picture 
Autumn Days 



page 

1 

1 

3 

7 

7 

8 

9 

9 

10 

11 

13 

14 

15 

16 

17 

18 

18 

22 

23 

24 

25 

25 

27 

28 

28 

29 



VI. 



CONTENTS. 



PAGE 

Egypt ....... 30 

The Sun and Moon in Egypt ... 31 

To a Rose ...... 33 

Sunlight and Shade .... 34 

Santa Barbara ..... 36 

The Ice-Queen's Jewels .... 38 

'Tis a Soft Venetian Song .... 39 

Sky and Sunshine ..... 42 

The Desert and Delta . . . . 42 

Man and the Wind .... 47 

To a Bunch of Violets .... 49 

On the Pier at Coppet, Lake Geneva . . 49 

A Fisherman's Song on Lake Geneva . . 51 

A Night in June ..... 52 

The Frozen Fountain .... 53 

Athens ...... 54 

Frost Flowers ...... 55 

On Seeing a Flock of Wild Ducks Fly Overhead 56 

The Snow Gift ..... 56 

The Small Horse-Chestnut Tree . . 57 

Sunrise on Pilatus-Kulm, Lake Lucerne . . 58 

On Board the "Dakahliah" ... 60 

To the Statue of Voltaire, at Ferney . . 61 

A January Breeze .... 62 

Nature ....... 63 

To an Unknown Portrait ... 64 

The Castles of the Air .... 66 

Over the Campagna .... 67 

The Poor-Housk Windows .... 69 

Sunset on the Columbia River, Oregon . 70 

Under the Apple Trees . . . . 71 

The Crocus ..... 72 



CONTENTS. 



Vll. 



Yellowstone Park 

Heidelberg 

To Pike's Peak 

Don and I 

To an Old Satchel 

A Memory of the " Ionia " 

Naples and Pompeii 

The Song of the Stars 

A String of Greek Beads 

Sunset 

At Virgil's Tomb 

The Rainbow at Lucerne 

On Lake Lucerne 

To a German Helmet 

The Jungfrau (From Interlaken) 

January and June 

A Small Roman Lamp 

Life's Garden 

Firenze (Florence) 

To a Waste-Paper Basket 

Historic Leaves (German Castles) 

Mind Pictures 

Swannanoa (Near Asheville, N. C.) 

Attic Fancies 

Sunrise Off Constantinople 

Alexandria, Egypt 

Nature's Song 



page 
74 

76 
78 
79 
SO 
82 
83 
87 
87 
89 
90 
94 
95 
95 
97 
98 
99 
100 
101 
105 
106 
107 
110 
112 
115 
116 
119 



LJ§T Op ILLUSTRATIONS 

I'AOK 

ice . . Frontispiece 

U B i ' [EB ..... 11 

LI 01 CHILLON AND Dl ,va 12 

Abab Woman and Donkey Boy ... 23 

Street in Arab Quarter, Cairo ... 24 

Date P i hi Nile .... 30 

Pyramids 01 QIzeh Village . - 32 

Obelisk oi Heliopolis, Cairo .... 42 

TOMBS OF THE KHALlFe CAIRO ... 44 

Citadel, Mosque oi Mohammed Ali and Mohammedan 

Cemetery ...... 4fj 

i i. oi Jupii i i: Olympus, Aa h . . 54 

Temple of Erectheon, Acropolis, Athens . . 66 

Watch Toweb and Bupbe< htsbau, ETeidbj berg Castle 76 

' 1 "i A1.1 Pompeii ... 83 

Cape Misenum, Bay of Baljs, near Naples . . 90 



f> t^ E f A ® £ 



What is my work? I do not toil; 

The groat world's workshop ne'er have known 
Five from trouble, from care, turmoil, 

My life is all my own. 
What shall I do with the precious gift? 

I must write it, clear and fair, 
In Time's thick day-book. I must uplift 

My life, that it shames not there 
Great names of the Past and Present time. 

Would I dare to write it down, 
Covered with blots, and scratches, and grime, 

To add a scowl or a frown 
To that spotless book? I will try and try. 

If some day my name I may write 
In the book of thoughts before I die. 

Then my life will add to the light 
Of the ages. If not; if it be not writ 

In that fair book, I will add 
No good to the world, no help; not one bit 

To man's good. What life more sad! 



PREFACE, 



There's a page for me all fresh and white. 

Take care ! The mind must be clean, 
The heart be true and the eyes be bright, 

To preserve its glistening sheen. 
Each word that I shape must be clear, 

Each thought that I shape be good, 
Each friendship I make sincere, 

If I add to the page as I should. 
Oh that I might to the world 

Give one thought — one lasting line ! 
Something upon the flag, unfurled 

To the gaze of the coming — a sign, 
To show to those, who seem not to see 

The beautiful all around, 
The glory of every-day sights ; to free 

One song of one sad sound; 
To add a little — one word, one thought. 

What an honor, a glory, to wear 
On one's written name one deed, that naught 

Could erase from its presence there ! 



THE VARIED SRAKE OF NATURES EASE, 



THE PEARL AND THE SHELL 

Out of the sky came a sea-shell, 

Pink at its narrow base, 
On distant, faint wings paling 

To films of snowy lace. 

A pearl in its heart lay glowing ; 

It shone all silvery white 
In the depths of the curving sea-shell, 

A disk of purest light. 

Then all but the jewel vanished, 
Dissolving, dispersing soon; 

For the shell was a cloud at sunset, 
The pearl is the shining moon. 

THE VOICE OF NATURE. 

How clear upon the quiet evening air 
Fall sounds of Nature's children from above, 

On leafy boughs, or o'er the white fields fair, 
Where speak all living things of Nature's love. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

The wild birds twitter in the green lace-work 
That holds all life within its meshes soft ; 

Here squirrels chatter, there the insects lurk ; 
Now all is silent. Then, from up aloft, 

There comes a concert, blending in a song 

From strong, untutored throats. 'Tis Nature's cry, 

More glad, more sad than all those that belong 
To truer songsters, though I know not why. 

For has a bird a thought — a soul? Ah no ! 

'Tis Nature singing in each little throat, 
And as we nearer to true Nature go 

More thrilling is the song, more true the note 

To move our hearts ; to give to us the peace 
That steals down gently as the lengthening rays 

Shoot o'er the grass when noisy labors cease, 
And all the restfulness of summer days : 

The fields, the flowers, the trees that soft lights find, 
The waving branch, the slender quivering blade 

Of grass, imprint upon the influenced mind 
A glory that will never pale nor fade. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

ROME. 

I have seen thee, ancient Home, 

Walked on stones that Caesar trod 
Down the Forum's paved expanse, 

Every temple to a god ! 
In the midst a column rises 

Bearing Phocas' name and life, 
On the right the Arch of Severus, 

Showing victory in the strife ; 
While beneath it runs a paving 

Leading down from Tolus' Head, 
Called for ages, " Sacra Via," 

Where the heroes, long since dead, 
Proudly marched into the Forum, 

Loudly hailed by Romans there, 
How the banners waved them welcome 

As the eagles rose in air ! 
Just beside it is the rostra 

Where the prows from Actium shone, 
Where the orators in words fought, 

All unarmed and all alone ; 
But their power has lasted longer 

Than the proudest warrior's sword ; 
Their words have been of greater worth 

Than suppressing Saxon horde. 
All about it rise the temples, 

Shrines to Saturn, Kings, and Peace, 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Graceful columns still uprising, 

Longing for their home, fair Greece. 
Down beyond the fluted pillar 

A basilica still stands, 
With its rows of broken columns, 

Where the merchants from all lands 
Met to talk of trades and barter ; 

And perhaps to cast a glance 
At the circles in the pavement, 

For the ancients played at chance. 
Still those circles in the pavement 

Show as clearly as of old, 
Telling how a rooted evil 

For all ages keeps its hold. 
From that heap, but once a temple, 

On the day "Great Cassar" fell 
Antony drew the people round him, 

All the bitter news to tell ; 
Then far down these narrow highways 

Eager, frenzied, did they run; 
But the speaker turned and murmured : 

"Let them go, 'tis done, 'tis done!" 
In this atrium, long deserted, 

Burned the virgins' sacred fire; 
But the altar's cold and empty; 

Long ago did it expire ! 
'Gainst the walls, the stony vestals 

Look in horror at their fane, 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Now besieged by wandering pilgrims ; 

They will never move again. 
Turned to stone in holy horror, 

Through the ages long they stand, 
Watching changes, many changes 

Coming to their sunny land. 
Modern Rome ! yet still the ancient 

Stands aloof, nor heeds its march ; 
Never changing, never changing, 

In its temple or its arch. 
Underneath the Arch of Titus 

Nero swept with glittering train 
To the fights, the cruel slaughters, 

That were never seen again, 
Even in Rome, so fierce and bloody, 

And when he had passed away 
Rose his statue tall and shining 

Just beside the Sacred Way ; 
So the Theatre of Flavian 

Changed its name to one we know, 
From the bronze, colossal statue 

On the pedestal below. 
Climb the mighty Colosseum, 

Look down on the emperor's throne, 
Facing full the broad arena, 

Silent, lifeless, empty, lone! 
But the sun shines brightly, clearly, 

On the massive arches high ; 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Great stones glowing red and fiery 

'Gainst the deep blue southern sky. 
Stones on stones they piled to build it ! 

Stone by stone 'twas torn away ! 
But bricks and mortar stood against 

The ravage of that day. 
Now they prize the place they pilfered 

For the money that it brings. 
How the Roman spirit's fallen! 

How 'tis turned to minor things ! 
But we look upon the same stones, 

And we people it again ; 
All the houses of the Palatine, 

Every palace, bath, and fane; 
Still the paintings and mosaics 

Made by other centuries' hands 
Show us what their arts and thoughts were, 

What they lent to other lands, 
And the Lares on the threshold 

Guard their homes in peace or war ; 
Though one never pours an offering, 

Though their worshippers are far, 
Far away in bright Elysium, 

Thoughtless of their former home, 
Of the city of the glorious past, 
Far ruling, ancient Rome. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 7 

STRINGS OF AMETHYSTS. 

The Grecian isles, the purple mounts, 

That lie upon the crystal sea, 
Are strings of amethysts she counts, 

Athene, tall, and fair, and free. 
Each jewel means a legend told, 

Each isle a gem upon the chain 
Of myths and fancies, strung on gold 

Of sunset clouds along the main. 

WILD GRAPE BLOSSOMS. 

Did you ever ride in June through a wood, 
When an odor made you wonder if it could 
Be the air that you were breathing, just the air; 
Seemed that all the fields were wreathing blossoms fair; 
Giving forth a gracious perfume, fresh and soft, 
Winging down from every leaf -roof up aloft, 
Where the wild grape loves to curl, and climb, and cling, 
Endless tendrils creeping, round each branch to fling ? 
Just an odor like a song the fairies know, 
Just the faintest breeze that ever wind did blow, 
Just the whisper of a thought too fair to be, 
Just the blending of the ripples on the sea ; 
These, all these, like scattered pictures come and go, 
When the wild grapes strew their bounty high and low, 
Unseen blossoms breathing peacefulness and rest ; 
Odors far too faint and subtle to suggest. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

INSPIRATION. 

There comes a feeling in my heart 

That welleth up again, 
That leads me from the world apart, 

A subtle, joyous pain. 
'Tis not my beloved books I seek, 

Not for knowledge unknown, 
But a thirst to impart, though weak, 

The message that to me is blown 
By the winds. The strength and glory 

Of inspiration on life ; 
To tell the whole pure story, 

And free my thoughts from strife ; 
How best to bring to the vision 

Of those whose eyes do not see, 
How to win their clear decision 

And their thoughts untrammeled, free, 
To the life of joy and gladness 

From one look into Nature's soul; 
To feel too a tremulous sadness 

In the beauty and truth of the whole. 
Each his own guide must become 

To that peerless place of rest, 
For the air, too light, might tire some 

Or make them dizzy at best. 
Gradually up in the mind-soul 
Must we travel day by day, 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Till we see the clouds of indifference roll 

In dissolving mists away. 
No more can a cloud take flight 

From that space far down below 
To sadden inspiration's height, 

Where the flowers of happiness grow. 

INVITATION. 

Come, read with me a story 

Of most charming ancient lore, 
Lit with deep and blazing glory, 

Always new, though read before. 
Every day are added lines 

To this weird and fitful tale ; 
Every hour the land in light combines, 

Each leaf -blade brings its frail, 
But growing chapter to the whole ; 

Come, read fair Nature's book, 
Come, drink deep draughts from Nature's soul 

In this green and grass-grown nook. 

A DROWSY AFTERNOON. 

What must the wind be saying, 

As whispering, slipping down, 
With cornstalks lightly playing, 

He glides through the sleepy town 



10 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

That the summer sun so drowsy made ; 

He hears no answering sound, 
He creeps along, almost half-afraid 

Of the stillness all around ; 
But his footsteps the insects have waked, 

His breath has shaken the leaves, 
And softly the lawn he has raked 

With his fingers. The bright sun grieves, 
And withdraws his golden glory 

From lawn and garden green, 
But the wind sings on his story 

In shadow or sunlight sheen. 

AN ANSWER. 

You think a poet ne'er should cease 
From murmuring an endless song, 

His every thought for you release, 
If it be light or long. 

Can streams forever laugh among 

The stones and waving grass? 
Sometimes their song cannot be sung 

For those who, listening, pass. 

Sometimes the winter freezes light 
Their heart-strings' eager beat; 

Sometimes the sun is far too bright, 
Too strong the summer's heat. 



Far up J mong the snow peaks 
It trickled in slow drops 
From hundreds of glaciers — 

— The Rhone. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 11 

And oft comes in a poet's life 

Weather by cold winds brought, 
There sometimes comes an inward strife 

To steal from him his thought, 

To bear away the fantasy, 

Or turn an image cold, 
And that wild careless melody 

Is never told. 

THE RHONE. 

[ABOVE LAKE GENEVA.] 

Down the broad valley 

The swift torrent rushes, 

Ice cold from the glaciers 

It foams on the rocks, 

In whirlpools and deep holes 

It gurgles and gushes, 

The thick walls and stone-work 

It laughs at, and mocks. 

Far up 'mong the snow peaks 
It trickled in slow drops 
From hundreds of glaciers, 
To gather in streams, 
That fell down headlong 
From the steep cliffs and hill-tops, 
Slid down the smooth slopes, 
Or hid in the deep seams. 



12 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

On, on, to the blue lake 
It turns and it tumbles, 
To be lost on its surface, 
So smooth, broad, and calm, 
But over the stones 
How it roars, and it grumbles 
Till it reaches Lake Leman, 
A smooth, calming balm. 

Soon lost in the blue lake, 

It flows past that green shore 

Most pictured and sung of 

In tale, and in song; 

It knocked on the dungeon 

And many a hole wore 

In the wall that confined there 

Brave Bonnivard long. 

For a time it flows calmly, 
Past Vevey and Lausanne, 
The green banks of Schweiz, 
The steep hills of Savoy ; 
But soon with its temper 
The swift- rushing, rough Rhone, 
Shoots out of the lake 
With a wild shout of joy. 



Soon lost in the blue lake, 
It flows 'past that green shore 
Most pictured, and sung of 
In tale, and in song. 



-The Rhone, 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 13 

ISLE OF CAPRI.— BAY OF NAPLES. 

The snowy gull over the blue sea glides 
In the shadow of Capri's rocky sides, 
Where the water is deepest of indigo blues, 
And far, farther down 'mong the clearest of hues 
And shades of the color, all gleaming and white, 
The shells of the ocean bed shine in the light. 

Through a low rocky arch the old boatman rowed in 

To a cavern, far bluer and brighter within; 

A sheen and a shimmer on the clear water shone, 

A glitter and glimmer, reflected alone 

Thro' the small rounded entrance that leads to the world, 

By which the clear water from turquoise is pearled. 

In the deep fairy cavern low murmurings rang ; 
Come, list to the song that the cave fairies sang: 

Up from the ocean bed, 

Light as the foam 

Rose a bright sea nymph one day, 

Thinking, 'tis said, 

O'er the smooth sea to roam 

'Mong the steep purple islands of fair Naples' bay. 

Into this grotto blue 
'Neath the clear ocean's wave, 
Glided the sea nymph so bright ; 
Never in water's hue 



14 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Had she seen such a cave, 

Resting within from her long weary flight. 

Charmed by our lovely home, 

Under its spell, 

She joins her song with us now, 

Begging you not to roam 

More in the field or dell, 

Come, 'neath the green mountain's brow. 

Joy is eternal here, 

All our world's bright, 

listen ! list to our song ! 

Never know we a fear 

Playing in bluest light, 

Come, live with us, live with us long! 

Ah! the sea fairies' song was enticing and clear, 
And we longed to float ever, and ever to hear 
But the murmur of waves and the tales that they told 
Yet the old boatman's heart was so stony and cold 
That he rowed us away, until all we could see 
Was a little dark hole, where the fairies are free. 

MOONLIGHT. 

The air to-night is mild as June, 
The shining, round, bright silver moon, 
Looks through the limbs, still bare of leaves, 
And throws dark shadows 'neath the eaves 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 15 

And o'er the ground, in waving lines, 
Like mystic, cabalistic signs, 
Moved slightly as the branches sway 
Below a sky as bright as day ; 
Unfathomed stories printed there — 
Tales of the earth — songs of the air. 

THE BEGINNING OF AUTUMN. 

[A MEMORY OF GENEVA.] 

I can never forget the picture 

Of a cluster of slender trees, 
Turned yellow and brown by the sunshine — 

Some fallen leaves whirled by the breeze 

O'er the gray paving stones of a court and a road, 

At the top of a gentle hill, 
In the mellow shadows of a building old, 

A spot so calm and still 

That a nameless feeling of sorrow and joy, 

Whispered by winds still fair, 
Made the whole world seem more sadly sweet, 

And blew onward every care. 

So we lingered there in the sunshine, 

Watched the first leaves rustle and fall, 
Whirling about in the autumn breeze, 

In the shade of an old stone wall. 



16 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE, 

THE ROSE AND THE SAND. 

[FAREWELL TO CAIRO.] 

A rose bent over a grain of sand, 
In the delicate beauty of yellowish pink, 

And wondered where, in what far-off land, 

Were such hard smooth crystals ; and could not think 

Why she found them there, in those lofty halls, 

By the side of her slender flower vase. 
She bent down low to the shining balls, 

And wafted a breath from her fair sweet face 

O'er the sand, that lay on the table there 

In a smooth and yellow mound, 
That a traveler brought with greatest care, 

The grains that he gathered around 

The base of the pyramids, lofty and great, 

On the edge of the desert plain, 
Looking over the valley of orange and date, 

Where the flood for months has lain 

On the fertile fields — to the city beyond 

Where the rose gardens flourish and bloom. 

The sand had seen a palm tree's frond, 
But ne'er had it felt the perfume 

That was wafted so gently down over it now. 
'Twas the breath of the fair and unknown. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 17 

It pondered and pondered, and wondered how 
Such a delicate flower was sown. 

And the rose whispered low in a sweet perfume, 

" I am the type of the Nile, 
Of the fertile Delta, the land of bloom 

That stretches for many a mile." 

And the sand, shifting down in a gentle breeze, 

Answered, " I am the desert so wide 
That in Egypt so well with the valley agrees 

And bounds it on every side." 

The rose and the sand I send to thee; 

May thy days be fair in the land, 
And think a little sometimes of me 

As thou lingerest 'midst roses and sand. 

RECOLLECTION. 

Yes, sweetest happiness is recollection! 
For in it every joy is oft repeated, 
And all the sorrows melt into a cloud 
To hasten o'er the distant horizon. 
All that is fair, each word, each thought 
Remains, to cheer us on to newest enterprise. 
The sights are best that were seen yesterday, 
Touched by the rosy lips of Memory. 
Come then and tell me of the joyful Past, 



18 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

And after all is well thought-on. well-sung. 
Let's seek again new treasures for our minds 
To hold, and weave into the endless chain 
Of happiness, that in a garland grows 
Of blooming flowers, till all the mind and soul 
Are deep embalmed in earth's sweet harmonies. 

SNOW MUSIC. 

A feathery snow stole down last night 

And whispered soft, as slow it fell. 
Faint, gentle music . sweet and light. 

More mystical than words can tell : 
Flew in a shower of downy riakes 

That the evergreens caught in their arms — 
Strong arms that a light wind scarcely shakes — 

And preserved them from all alarms. 
Then as the light came over the trees 

They stretched out their branches in greeting. 
To the gift sent down from northern seas 

To the day, by the hours fleeting. 

SPRING FLOWERS. 

Smooth white petals around the hem. 

Within, a small red frill. 
Some little green buttons to hold the stem : 

That is the gay jonquil. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 19 

The daffodil hides in a yellow bell, 
But she waves her arms to the breeze ; 

She has many secrets, deep, to tell 
Of the flowers whose coming she sees. 

Anemones, so delicate and fair, 

Flowers of the wind and gentle rain, 
You come with spring's first warm, inviting air, 

To sprinkle blossoms o'er the grass again. 

Deep blue bunches nestling down, 

Hiding each modest head 
Beneath the leaves from April's frown, 

Violets bloom in a mossy bed. 

Shining gold in the soft green grass, 

The buttercups are here ; 
They glitter and laugh with all who pass, 

They have lost a spring flower's fear. 

I know why you look so gay, so gay, 
Dandelion buttons close to the ground ; 

You are fresh and bright on the dustiest day, 
Though so lowly, seen all around. 

I thought the snow had come back to-day 

'Mong the plum trees all abloom, 
Until from the breath of each pure white spray 

Stole a delicate, faint perfume. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

The grass is high beneath the green trees 
That cast cool shadows so broad and dark, 

The lilac plumes in a southern breeze 
Toss to and fro ; a last bright spark 

Lingers upon the burning bush ; 

The jonquils white, in long rows 
Beside the path, bend over and push 

Their neighbors, as the wind blows. 

The quince tree blossoms of pink I see, 
Fairer the apple with faint perfume ; 

As the poet said, the soul of the tree 
Has come forth in its fair and delicate bluom. 

DOGWOOD. 

Great silent flowers of purest white, 

Apart from other wild blooms you seem — 

A cold, mysterious, Alpine height 

Looking down on the green hills and stream. 

As the train sped on 'mid woods and fields 

To the city noisy and great, 
Through the door a fragrance the crab tree yields 

Made us long to linger, to wait 
Beside the winding quiet stream, 

Where the pink blooms fill the air 
With perfumes that truly the sweetest seem 

Of all wild blossoms fair. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 21 

The dark brown calycanthus, 

A perfume of strawberries fresh, 
Teaching that in the quietest face 

May be hidden, a golden mesh 
Of thoughts so fair and charming, 

A mind so fresh and sweet, 
That you wonder why you were blinded 

When you and this friend did meet ; 
For after you fold it closer 

The odors grow sweeter, to last 
Long after the flower is faded, 

Its freshness a thought of the past; 
And often a perfume steals toward you 

When the flower hides shyly away, 
As the deeds of those fairies on earth 

Hidden well from the curious day. 

Scarlet honeysuckle, 

Trumpet delicate and bright 
Lined with golden pollen, 

Where the humming bird so light 
Poised, in mid-air, sipping 

Honey hiding at the base, 
Flitting to each slender blossom 

With a sweet and airy grace. 

Thick, white, heavily-scented flowers 
On bushes that grow by the fence, 



22 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

You hasten us on to the summer hours 
Syringa; the warm days commence. 

As I wandered through the garden 

I met a cornflower gay ; 
He stood erect and slender, 

While his loose hair blew this way 
And that, in the southern breezes 

That came from over the hill, 
Kissing the tiny rosebuds ; 

The birds began to trill 
That summer was coming, was coming, 

That the cherries would soon be red, 
That the bees had commenced their humming 

By the sweetest blossoms led. 
■ 

THE OLD ICE WITCH. 

[Suggested by an old woman singing, with a zither accompaniment, in the ice 
cavern of Grindelwald Glacier, and two children who sang outside.] 

In a green ice cave, far, far away, 

An old witch lived for many a day 

In the "cold dark North;" and two children fair, 

With bright blue eyes, a beauteous pair. 

On harp strings, made of their golden hair, 

She played all day an echoing air, 

While they sang 'mong the rocks with voices sweet, 

As the little snowbirds flew about their feet. 



Did you ever ride through Cairo streets 
On a donkey of queerest clip? 

— Cairo Streets, 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 23 

The old witch sat in her cavern cold, 
Watching over a pot of gold, 
Singing and playing an echoing air 
Only heard by some straying polar bear. 

But the birds remembered the children's song; 
They carried the news for a distance long, 
To a city far down on a bright blue sea, 
To tell the story so strange to me. 



CAIRO STREETS. 

Did you ever ride through Cairo streets 

On a donkey of queerest clip? 
Past gay bazaars of rugs and shoes, 

The stately desert ship, 
With your little steed's necklace jingling, 

His little legs shaved in lines, 
The donkey boy screaming and yelling 

At the long-robed Arab, who dines 
Before the door of his tiny shop, 

Or smokes his pipe in the way ; 
At the women who stride with bending step, 

On their heads a jar or tray? 
He cries " Mushaus " and " Mina."* 

He keeps an astonishing pace, 

* » Mushaus,"-get out of the oad ; '« Mina,"-to th left of i he road. 



24 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

And pokes his burro hard and fast 

As he joins in the long mad race. 
No matter how narrow and crowded the streets, 

No matter how sharp are the turns, 
We rush along in a wonderful way, 

For the youngest child soon learns 
How to live in the track, 

And not under the feet, 
Their ears are sharp, 

Their sandals are fleet. 
The clamor, the clatter, the hammer, the patter, 

'Tis the funniest thing in the world 
To mount a donkey, then shout " Kull6,"f 

And through Cairo streets be whirled. 



AUGUST. 

Golden rod nodding, and daisies tall, 

The rocky bed of a dried-up rill, 
The first faint whisperings of Fall 

In the branches over the hill ; 
The narrow road and the winding trail 

Half hidden in sumach's red plumes, 
Fair summer's flowers, faint blue and pale, 

'Mid Autumn's hardier blooms. 

t "Kulld," everywhere. 



Mid gay bazaars of rugs and shoes. 

— Cairo Streets. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 25 

FIREFLIES. 

Over the field of daisies white 
Softly steals down the summer night. 
Then fireflies come from the trees and grass, 
Flicker and shine as they pass and repass 

O'er the snowy expanse of daisy heads, 

Far on where the shade of the orchard spreads ; 

The firefly greatest among them all 

Shines high above the oak trees tall : 

On a pale blue ground the evening star 
Twinkles and glows in the sky so far, 
Ever at watch o'er the smaller lights 
On these tranquil, warm, fair summer nights. 

Great men their influence shed afar, 
As the mellow light of the evening star, 
But those who possess less wealth or wit 
Like fireflies, ever in unison, flit. 

MOZART, "THE KING OF TONES." 

[After the first presentation of " Idomeneus " before the Elector Karl 
Theodore, at Munich, 1781.] 

At his father's feet he lay 
Blessed by that old trembling hand ; 

'Twas the glad and crowning day! 
Son and father both so grand — 



26 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Mozart elder in the wonder 

And the pride of his dear son, 
When the tones had rolled as thunder, 

Or as fountains, all ears won; 
There the young and pale musician, 
All his strength merged into joy, 
With the clear, sweet intuition 

That the father blessed his boy. 
The last notes had richly sounded 

Through gay Munich's opera, crowded; 
The applause with might resounded ; 

Now the seats and aisles were shrouded 
In still darkness. Not a footfall, 

Only where the stage lights glimmered 
On a space about the leader's stall, 

On the picture shone and shimmered 
Of the father, proudest-hearted, 

Who had watched throughout the night, 
Of the son, his fair hair parted 

By the hand that lay so light 
On his forehead, bubbling, teeming now 

Beneath the brow so calm, 
With tones that might draw back and bow 

All Munich to yield the palm. 
Now these lights, too, are extinguished; 

Out into the world again 
Mozart goes, the crowned, distinguished, 

Soul of tones, but life of pain. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 27 

MILAN CATHEDRAL. 

riNTERIOR.] 

Down from the windows there fell in a flood, 

The full rich glory of purple light 
On the pavement of marble, in mosaic wrought, 

Fell from a glorious height, 

Far up 'mong the pillars that rise to the roof, 

So beautiful, airy and grand, 
Where the saints and the martyrs watching over the 

In their countless niches stand. [church, 

All in the darkness that middle aisle ; 

But down from the pulpit high 
The gilded bronze threw a brighter light. 

The odor of incense floated by ; 

And behind the glitter, behind the sheen, 

Three windows shining rise, 
That glow with a thousand figures burnt, 

Three windows of wondrous size. 

As I look up at the shining throng 

It larger seems to grow, 
And all in a mist of roseate light 

To rise up from below, 

To float away in the rafters high, 

A countless procession of light 
To leave the dim church choir behind — 

I turned — 'twas almost night. 



28 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

MILAN CATHEDRAL. 

[EXTERIOR.] 

A forest of poplars turned to stone, 

Against a pale gold sunset sky, 
Far above them, pointed and lone, 

A statue of stone on its pedestal high ; 
While from each slender poplar tree 

A figure looks to the Lombard Plain, 
Over the city, silently, 

Through sunshine and through rain, 
Ever watching its spotless trust, 

Carved out of marble white, 
Standing against the golden sky 

All in the sunset light. 

TO A BABY PICTURE. 

Little girl up in the picture frame, 

Is it true that I once was you? 
With curling black hair, and a baby name. 

Little girl, you never grew; 

But the tiny white dress with 'broidery round 

Is as fresh as on that day 
When they painted your cheeks, so rosy and round, 

Your eyes that they said were gray. 

Your good-luck coin hangs from its chain, 
Upon it a French king's head— 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 29 

Unused, it long in a drawer has lain, 
But into good-luck has the baby led. 

Baby, baby, with laughing eyes, 

Do you think I was ever you? 
Open your lips in glad surprise 

And tell me it is true. 



AUTUMN DAYS.— FLORENCE. 

A long, broad, level, brownish road, 
Sycamore trees on either side, 

The withered, turned-up leaves blow past, 
Telling a tale of summer-tide. 

Whenever I see that yellowish light 
Creep over the leaves of green, 

A feeling of restfulness and content, 
A feeling of happiness keen, 

Takes me away from my daily thoughts, 
Away from the world around : 

I only look at the yellowing leaves 
That lie on the brownish ground. 

As old clothes give more pleasure and rest 

Than the finest satin or lace, 
So do these worn-out summer's robes, 

As they blow about my face. 



30 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 



EGYPT. 

The land of the rose and the jasmine. 

The land of the sand and the stone, 
The land of sweet-scented gardens, 

The land of the pyramids lone. 




The graceful palms that wave their slender fronds. 

— The Sun and Moon in Egypt, 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 31 

THE SUN AND MOON IN EGYPT. 



[On the road from the Pyramids to Cairo.] 

golden moon that looks down on the Nile ! 

The sandy desert hills in clearest light, 
The graceful palms that wave their slender fronds, 

The flooded fields all silent in the night ! 
You shine upon this broad and rippling sea 

That covers well the fertile land beneath ; 
While low green islands rise above the wave, 

And tall straight corn-fields with their cold green sheath. 

All things at rest in nature. Brightly o'er 

You gaze upon the pigmy people's haste, 
Who ride along upon their stately ships, 

On through the green trees to that yellow waste — 
The Desert of Sahara, rising up 

Above the fertile Delta of the Nile, 
Stretching afar to Western Afric' sands 

For many a long, and dry, and weary mile. 

Just where the fields so green and desert meet, 

The oldest works of man look down on them, 
As if to show the end of blossoming, 

The dreary desert wastes that seem to hem 
Around about this greenest bit of life ; 

They stand above with broken steps and rough. 
How did they raise those square and heavy stones? 

Where did they find a quarry large enough? 



32 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Awe inspiring, towering up so high, 

Cold and unflinching, like the fates of old, 
Looking far off into the future land, 

Farther than all the ancient stories told ; 
But when the sun set in the distant West, 

We saw that promised land all glowing gold 
And brilliant red behind the desert sand, 

No more the pyramids looked stony cold. 

Only dark fingers, pointing clearly up, 

Engraved upon the glowing golden light, 
And happiness and hope and perfect peace 

Stole down upon us with the wondrous sight. 
All things were bright; even 'neath the level lake 

A golden column glowed with richest hue, 
That the moon's shining ball had pointed out 

Far down where shining crops once bloomed and grew. 

And this seemed but a promise of the next, 

The root from which the golden wheat will spring, 
The fairy gift that sailed down through the sky 

As lightly as the white gulls on the wing ; 
'Twas in the palace of the man who looks 

All night upon the earth with smiling face, 
And when he sees a country that he loves 

To shine upon, he sends down to the race 

Such bits of brightness, that make all things fair, 
The golden wheat and corn, and hanging fruit, 



Just where the fields so green and desert meet — 

— The Sun and Moon in Egypt. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 33 

Dates and bananas, yellow roses' hue, 
The cotton's bloom, the slender bamboo flute. 

You look so calm, benign, protecting, kind, 

O beautiful, round, shining, golden ball ! 
Where'er I see your face, on every shore, 

You send a welcome to the travelers all, 
That makes the place a home, the world a friend; 

A face that changes not with climes and sands ; 
You always speak a language clear and plain. 

We part, but soon to meet, in other lands. 



TO A ROSE. 

Fairest of earthly possessions, 

Sweetest, most delicate one, 
Flower for tender confessions ; 

Be you of gold, as the sun, 

Crimson as bright clouds at sunset, 
Pale as the dawn's coming light, 

With heavy and cool morning dew wet, 
Or touched by the breezes of night. 

Be you pure as the drift-snow of winter, 
Be you glowing as summer's bright sun, 

The sunshine, that wonderful tinter, 
Has made you the fairest, sweet one. 



34 THE VAEIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

SUNLIGHT AND SHADE. 

The road that I love best to follow 

Winds o'er the hill and down a hollow, 

Where graceful sprays of elder white 

Breathe sweetest fragrance day and night . 

Among their thick leaves, darkest green, 

A rustic bridge peeps out between 

The branches, o'er a tiny stream 

Where here and there a bright pool's gleam 

Shows where the shallow water lies — 

This hidden streamlet's sparkling eyes. 

It winds beside a meadow's edge 

Shaded by one long, wild-grown hedge, 

Below a fringe of elm trees tall 

From which the cool, dark shadows fall 

Upon the fields, now cleared of grain, 

Sweet from the hay that long had lain 

In the all-warming harvest sun, 

That makes the wild flowers laugh, each one. 

Upon a hill the oat fields bend 

In gray, and blue, and green, which blend 

Like ocean waves that wash the shore — 

How gently do these grain waves roar ! 

They whisper to the breezes soft 

That whisper back on hill tops oft ; 

They whisper to the roses wild 

That in great masses long have smiled 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 35 

Upon the sun, deep pink or fair, 
Graceful and bright, without a care. 
The hardy golden daisies, too, 
With centers of a nut-brown hue 
Stand clustering in merry groups. 
Not one among them bends or droops, 
But all erect, on sturdy stems, 
Form garlands for the bright green hems 
That edge the fields and orchards now 
Laden with ripening fruit ; each bough 
Weighed down with apples, yellow, red, 
Or still fresh green. This road has led 
Me oft far o'er the neighboring hill, 
And others on in windings, till 
The dear home village spread beneath 
The groves of Webster. Many a wreath 
Of memories could I weave and twine 
Around the hills that I call mine, 
Covered with grand old forest trees. 
Between them spreading lawns one sees 
And grape vines' twisted trunks, that hang 
In loops and swings, 'mong woods that rang 
With Indians' whoop and wild beasts' cries 
Ere they were seen by Frenchmen's eyes. 
Then came the fearless pioneers 
Who mowed their way not knowing fears; 
Leaving the wood's majestic height 
And opening vistas for the sight 



36 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Of drooping hickories, graceful elms 

That onward rose through woodland realms ; 

The Norway spruces planted, larch 

And pine, that formed in years an arch 

Sometimes, or nook deep-wrapped in shade, 

Or arbor that the branches made. 

Of that great book the sunshine weaves 

We have how many, many leaves, 

As soft winds wander gently by, 

Telling a tale in each low sigh 

Or rustle ! Never can the book 

Be read too much. Each tiny nook 

Is full of stories ; each bough sings 

Of birds, and bees, and insects' wings, 

Of sights since man first pierced these shades 

And wandered through the sunlit glades. 

The great oaks twist their branches high ; 

They look so gnarled — I wonder why ! 



SANTA BARBARA. 

Santa Barbara, my heart and soul were thine 
As I stood before thy ancient, holy shrine. 
Father Junipero toiled far up the way, 
And built two towers here to greet the day 
As it looked o'er the blue waters, and the isles, 
And the sea-cliffs stretching onward many miles. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 37 

Hoary gray and massive, this square ancient pair, 
Pierced by one long, winding, narrow, stony stair. 
! the view that stretched below us when we rested 
O'er the pointed front: one tower, scarce molested 
By the stranger, looking down into a space 
Walled about and green with graves, a quiet place. 

In the other, hung the two large Spanish bells, 
Cast about with Latin names and dates, like spells; 
While across the quaint and sloping red-tiled roof, 
Hidden 'mong the walls, lay charmingly aloof 
From the outer world the blooming inner court, 
Closed to women (two have entered by report). 
Down upon the snowy arches poured the light, 
Thickly in the sunny square bloomed roses bright ; 
Brown and heavy robe, with white rope 'round the waist, 
Wore a brother, who this tranquil beauty faced 
Through the long, warm, drowsy, brilliant summer day, 
Waiting for the tranquil night, the hour to pray 
In the church below us, dim, and cool, and long, 
'Mid the painted saints' and angels' evensong. 

Softly shake the eucalyptus' drooping leaves. 

What the memory for which its sighing grieves? 

Father Salvierderra? Yes, but he was old, 

A long, good life had led, the story told. 

And Ramona! ah, Ramona! she was fair, 

As the wings of night fell down her long dark hair. 



38 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Was she not much happier later with Felipe 
When the Indian lover's passion heart did sleep? 
Sleep ! restless Alessandro, could you lie 
Peacefully? 'Twas best, 'twas best that you should die. 

Eucalyptus, cease your sighing! cease! oh cease! 
In the Santa Clara Valley there was peace ; 
When the beauteous Indian maiden laid her head 
On Felipe's shoulder, all her sad days fled. 

THE ICE QUEEN'S JEWELS. 

Be jeweled, bedecked is the garden fair 

Which, at sunset, reared its bushes bare; 

For the ice queen came, and in darkness cased 

Each branch in a frozen coat, and laced 

A network of ice threads in and out 

Circling the fruit trees all about 

With a diamond coat. How each small twig shines ! 

The fences stretch in sharp, shining lines! 

Now as the day begins to dawn, 

And the garden shines dim in the pale light wan, 

She drops her necklace, a shower of pearls, 

That the wind now catches, now whirls and whirls, 

Till the jewels lie scattered all over the grass; 

As night o'er the west hill seems to pass, 

It leaves the morn so stern and cold 

This pure ice wonder to behold. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 39 

'TIS A SOFT VENETIAN SONG. 

[Suggested by a tiny silver gondola.] 

Here is a tiny silver boat 

That has touched the Venetian shore — 
Isles that seem to gently float 

Without a sail or oar. 

Strangely there with startling motion 

The gondolas swiftly glide 
Over the smooth, the dark blue ocean, 

Scarce moved by the gentle tide. 

How softly glows the moonshine 

O'er the city's marble face ! 
A long and shimmering, sparkling line 

Across the wave I trace; 

It comes to meet the slender boat 

Over the rippling water. 
What joy to be fore'er afloat! 

What joy to pause, to loiter 

Beneath some stately rounded dome 
Dark 'gainst the bright moonlight; 

Never, nevermore to roam, 
Never to leave this night ! 

The songs come softly floating 
From the music boat so bright, 



iO THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Hung round with rosy coating 
Of awning and lamp light ; 

A man's clear voice is singing, 

He is only a gondolier, 
But the strong true notes are ringing, 

Still singing to my ear. 

He stands upon the high black stern. 

'Tis a soft Venetian song — 
That it is no dream, I ne'er shall learn, 

Oh, may it last, last long! 

The music boat is moving past. 

Come, gondolier, follow, fly! 
The boats are motionless and cast 

Black figures on the sky — 

Quaint, graceful prow of shining steel, 

Body of gloomy black, 
A pointed, carved and slender keel; 

The gondolier, with back 

Bent slightly on the single oar — 
When, at the short command, 

The barks shoot forth and gently soar, 
Moved by each strong lithe hand. 

Again are the boatmen in motion 
With a swinging, wonderful bend 

Again do we glide o'er the ocean. 
The songs, far distant, lend 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 41 

Enchantment, soft, mysterious, sweet. 

Look up at the palace walls ! 
Look up at the carvings that ever meet 

In graceful arches, where falls 

The moonshine, making them purely white! 

Was ever a dream more fair? 
Let us follow the shimmering road of light , 

Follow, follow, and ne'er 

Float away from this fairy scene 

Where sights are worldly never ! 
The airy gondolas stand between 

The sea and the sky forever. 



The music boat is floating past. 

Pursue, pursue, my boat! 
Let the moonlight ever last, 

Let us ever be afloat 

On this street the most enchanting, 
Paved by the silvered moon ; 

The shadows grow deeply slanting, 
We must leave the broad lagoon. 

Palaces wrought by fairy hands, 
Palaces golden and white, 

Among the nights in many lands, 
None are fairer than your night 



42 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

SKY AND SUNSHINE. 

A break in the clouds, 

The blue, blue sky, 
The wild North wind 

Comes whistling by. 

A quick glad joy 

In the sparkling light, 
In the blue above 

And the dark cloud's flight. 

A thought that has made 

One more bright space, 
That future clouds 

Can never erase. 

THE DESERT AND DELTA. 

Out in the sands of the desert 

O'erlooking the plain of the Nile, 
In tents 'mong the smooth, sandy billows, 

The Bedouins the sunshine beguile. 
Tall and dark, bright and strong, quick in temper 

Is the child of the desert and sand, 
In the folds of his flowing white mantle, 

As he leads forth his small, restless band. 
These tombs all around near a city 

Once stood, and the Pyramids brown 



Heliopolis, obelisk lonely — 

— The Desert and Delta. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 43 

Slowly rose, by the wealth of kings builded, 

To keep their names still in renown. 
But only the Bedouin and stranger 

Look up at the mountains of stone, 
Feel the past glory lingering 'round them, 

The grandeur all silent and lone ; 
The child of the desert is eager, 

And brings forth a camel and boy : 
' ' Mount, ride to the Sphinx," he commands you. 

On a camel ! What unthought-of joy ! 
To the Sphinx with its smile ever widening 

As centuries chip off its face, 
Time, fanatics, Turks, men of all nations, 

Leaving now but a vanishing trace 
Of its beauty; but wondrous it still is, 

Still watching the sun rise each day 
That for centuries, o'er the sand billows, 

Has lighted its face, wan and gray. 

To the Island of Roda we must go 

Says Absalom Levi, our guide, 
Between sailing and dervishes howling 

An afternoon sunny divide. 
Pandemonium of Koran and music, 

Hair, prayer, eyes and cries, in a whirl; 
Arms in motion, souls steeped in emotion, 

Shouting forth from the Koran each pearl 
Of truth. Deaf to truth or to falsehood 



U THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

When that noisiest hour was o'er, 
We took a last glance, where they sat 

'Mid a circle of skins on the floor. 
Isle of Roda, a lotus leaf floating 

On the level expanse of the river, 
Where the rushes that once hid a cradle 

Still bend in the current, and shiver 
In the breeze that is driving our sail boat 

Back to old Cairo's city of gloom: 
The narrowest ways, and the churches 

Half buried and cold as a tomb. 
A drive to the mosque alabaster, 

A gem on the Citadel's crown; 
To the West, the dark Pyramids pointing, 

As the sun in a glory goes down : 
Down, down, where the desert lies burning 

And panting in infinite space, 
Leaving only an infinite yearning 

Its farthest boundaries to trace. 

To the East, to the Tombs of the Khalifs 

Fresh energy takes us next day 
On donkeys, by brisk Arabs driven 

Down the noisy, thick-peopled highway, 
The u Muski," the heart of the city, 

To those sand dunes o'erlooking the town 
Where the mosques, alabaster-lined, scattered 

O'er the level, are slow-crumbling down. 



To the East, to the Tombs of the Khali fs — 

— The Desert and Delta. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 45 

Domes in plastered design fantastic, 

Tall minarets slender and white ; 
Below lie the mazes of buildings, 

Countless minarets taking their flight 
Above the striped walls of their white mosques, 

O'er the domes, smooth and rounded, that rear 
Many heads above each of the churches ; 

The tall spires on the sky clear 
Soar above them with mystic suggestion, 

Above the bazaars' noisy ways, 
Above turbans and gowns of all colors 

Through the sun's hot and glaring noon rays, 
When the streets are half-silent, deserted; 

Till Cairo wakes in the cool hours, 
As the muezzins' strange echoing chanting 

Resounds from the minaret towers. 

Through shaded drives bordered by corn fields 

We are taken some five miles away 
To the Tree of the Virgin, still standing, 

It is claimed, from that far distant day 
In the centuries past, when the Virgin 

Rested under the sycamore's shade. 
How twisted the heavy-barked trunk is ! 

What a stunted, gray form Time has made. 
But a jasmine vine trails all about it, 

Hides the low fence around it in bloom, 
And lends to the spot a sweet memory, 



46 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

A subtle and gracious perfume. 
Heliopolis, obelisk lonely, 

Only trace of a city deep-hid, 
Partly covered itself by Time's earthworks 

The waving green corn fields amid. 
The busy bees build in the carving 

Of the characters cut in your stone, 
An Arab group roasts the ripe corn ears — 

A happy and bright modern tone - 
Their blue robes that shine in the green fields, 

The obelisk, ancient and gray, 
The blending of Past and of Present 

In the thick Delta life of to-day. 

We hasten by train to the sea shore, 

The desert walls slowly recede, 
A caravan follows the old path ; 

We pass quickly by in our speed 
Through low mud towns, each on its rough mound 

Built up on its ancestor's wall, 
The houses that stood there before them 

Adding to the town's height by their fall; 
Ever raising them up and still upward 

Above the Nile's rising each year, 
Looking high over stretches of flood land 

Above all the danger and fear ; 
While profiting from the Nile's bounty 

Brought down as a midsummer gift, 



A drive to the mosque alabaster, 
A gem on the CitadeVs crown — 

— The Desert and Delta 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 47 

Their food for a whole year supplying 

Their lowly condition to lift. 
Alexandria, you too are fading, 

Pompey's Pillar, the brilliant bazaar; 
The Egyptian ship heads to the Northward. 

No more will you seem a land far 
From our knowledge, but nearer will cluster 

The places that form now a part 
Of our lives, and impressions, and pleasures. 

Ah ! Seeing is better than Art. 



MAN AND THE WIND. 

MAN. 

Question: Whence do they come, 

These sweet and gentle thoughts, 

Suggestions fair and clear; 

The dreamy winds 

That whisper songs of joy, 

Of hope or fear, 

Echoing the moods 

Of those who list and hear? 

Musing: You always seem to sing the song 
That murmurs in my heart. 
You ever bring a pleasant throng, 



48 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Which of the life a part 
So great, so wondrous, forms 

That in the end it seems 
To banish all alarms 

And whisper in my dreams. 

THE WIND. 

I am the thoughts of men, 

So fleeting, changing so 
You never know the when, 

Or how, or why, or so 
Of other minds ; yet still 

I know them every one 
And clamber o'er a hill, 

Or whistle to the sun, 
And sing the thoughts of man; 

If he be gay or sad, 
Or as the streams began 

In spring, deep, cool, and glad — 
A mind as peaceful, fresh, 

Unmoved among the wood, 
But deep and with a mesh 

Of sunshine that is good. 
For each one I can bring 

A song full, clear and sweet, 
Blowing on joyous wing 

The bright thoughts to your feet. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 49 

TO A BUNCH OF VIOLETS. 

Somebody fastened you close to his heart, 

Violets, lying there crushed in the street, 
Ne'er thinking that you would so soon be a part 

Of the earth, trodden over by hundreds of feet. 
Too delicate, graceful, and fair to suggest 

Such an end, on the rough paving lying; 
Now there is left but one hope for your rest, 

That they tread lightly on you there, dying, 

ON THE PIER AT COPPET, LAKE 
GENEVA. 

[Near the Chateau of Madame de Stael.] 

Like a thousand stars the water shines, 

The waves lap on the shore, 
The fisherman watches his fishing lines, 

The soft winds sigh, " No more ! " 

Less than a hundred years ago, 

In the chateau on the hill 
Great men and women met to show 

What they thought was good or ill ; 

Politics, religion and the king, 

The literature of many lands 
They questioned ; gathering in a ring 

About one woman with nervous hands, 



50 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Waving a slender branch or vine 

To right and left as she talks, 
Quoting some short, concisive line 

Along the shady walks. 

Beyond the ivy-clad wall of stone 

Voltaire, Gibbon and Byron too, 
Rested, 'tween wit and beauty thrown, 

De Stael and Recamier, those two : 

The brightest woman in France was one — 

Too bright Napoleon thought, — 
The other by her lasting beauty won 

The world's admiration unsought. 

And when we asked a child in the street 

Who lived in the old chateau, 
She answered, " Mam'selle," in accent sweet, 

And wondered we did not know, 

For the countess, De Stael's niece, lives there. 

Perhaps sometimes she dreams 
Of the garden peopled with voices clear, 

So real the old time seems. 

Perhaps she sees her bright grand-aunt, 

Waving a branch or vine 
That she nervously plucked from a creeping plant, 

Or a low-hanging, long-leaved pine. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 51 

And perhaps De Stael, beside the way, 
Picked a twig from the self -same vine, 

Where I gathered a bunch of leaves to-day 
In the shade of a rustling pine. 



A FISHERMAN'S SONG ON LAKE 
GENEVA. 

On a turquoise lake, 

With a turquoise sky, 
We sail away 'mong mountains high, 

On Geneva's lake, 

With a silvery wake, 
Where stately swans float slowly by. 

With our sails full set, 

And a dragging net, 
The boat skims over the lake so wide ; 

Like a swallow's tail 

Is the lateen-sail 
That bears the boat on her larboard side ; 

Till the day is done, 

And the setting sun 
Lights up the snow-peaks, lone and grand; 

O'er a sea of gold, 

With fish in the hold, 
Our bark hastens on to the land. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

A NIGHT IN JUNE. 

How dark are the shadows, 

How bright is the light 

That the fair moon lets fall on our land ! 

Beneath the dark trees 

All is mystery, night ; 

On the smooth lawn, a shining clear band 

Of silvery whiteness ; 

The tips of the leaves, 

Transformed by the same gentle touch, 

Seem growing like her 

Who this radiance weaves 

O'er Nature she e'er loves so much. 

The tower's black outline 

Against the broad walk 

Is accented now by the moon. 

what would we know 

If the flowers could talk, 

The waves clearly whisper, the wind hums a tune 

That our dull ears could hear ; 

That our hearts could respond 

To the beauty of Nature we see ! 

But she is so great 

In her silence, beyond 

That we not yet are worthy to be. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 53 

In silent communion 

She still is unseen ; 

Yet she dwells in each leaf bud, each flower. 

However unconscious 

We long may have been, 

All true hearts must yield to her power ; 

Must watch her unceasing, 

Must wonder and wait 

For the blooming of each fair sweet thought 

In this way, in silence, 

By fragrance and light, 

Are her long lasting, deep lessons taught. 

THE FROZEN FOUNTAIN. 

TSOPHIA, BULGARIA.] 

A fountain laughed in the sunny light, 

The soft breeze hummed a song, 
The birds caught bugs in the roadway bright, 

And took cool draughts and long. 

An old ogre came along that way, 

"I'll have no mirth," he growled. 
In frozen jets stood the fountain's spray; 

Around the North wind howled. 

He turned all the gay little birds dull brown, 

Their tiny toes froze in the snow ; 
The ogre shook his icy crown, 

And oh ! how the winds did blow ! 



54 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

ATHENS. 

The hills around the Attic plain 
Glow reddish gold in sunset lights , 

And softly blue, when night again 
Creeps from the sea along the heights. 

The ocean lying 'mong the isles 

Forms mirrors, framed in marble white, 

Where gods perchance did see their smiles 
In shimmering, shining, crystal light. 

The temple walls rise purely white, 
Like cameos on the deep blue sky, 

Wrought by the jewelers of might 
Out of the earth, for praise on high. 

A mighty storm of Turkish ball 

Mowed down the columns, shafts and points; 
With leafy heads the pillars fall, 

To lie like reeds in broken joints. 

Some stand as slender flower stalks 
Left by the mower's hasty blade, 

That still wave by the barren walks 
And aisles that the sharp scythe has made. 

They show how fair the harvest bloomed. 

'Twas left ungathered where it lay, 
When last the cannon o'er it boomed; 

'Tis left unto the present day. 



The temple walls rise purely white, 
Like cameos on the deep blue sky — 

— Athens. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 55 

Farewell, ye last enduring flowers. 

Phoebus for thee has still a care, 
And patriots' tears in misty showers 

Will keep thee long from withering there. 

FROST FLOWERS. 

Tiny white frost flowers glinting, 

Late in spring, upon the grass 
Jack Frost left, in airy printing, 

As one night he chanced to pass. 

l ' Ah," he cried, " you say the garden 
Far more beauteous doth shine. 
Pray just let me ask your pardon 
As I say more fair is mine. 

" For those blossoms on the tree boughs 
Droop at last, to fade and fall. 
Little time the seeking earth allows 
To hide and bury all. 

" But my frost flowers in the sunshine, 
With one flash of sparkling joy, 
Leaving not a trace to make us pine 
For the earth and its alloy, 

" Leap into the air above them. 
Join that clear, ethereal sphere, 
Far from boundaries that closely hem ; 
The last moment a great tear 



56 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

" For the world, its passing beauties; 
Then the tear is lost in air ; 
Free from earth's successive duties 
My flowers need no thought or care." 

ON SEEING A FLOCK OF WILD DUCKS 
FLY OVERHEAD. 

A flash of blue and silver, 

Against the azure sky, 
A Hock of swift-winged wild ducks 

Fly like an arrow by. 

Their heads together pointed 

To the Eastward move the wings, 

Full extended to the breezes, 

Close, compact, the whole flock clings. 

Off into the misty blueness 

They are gone, a passing thought; 

But the flash of blue and silver 
In a memory was wrought. 

THE SNOW GIFT. 

Woods against the dim sky line 

Lit ting branches bare of leaves, 
Like a mesh of lace-work fine, 

That each wild tree-spirit weaves. 



A mighty storm of Turkish ball 

Mowed doivn the columns, shafts and points. 

— Athens. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 57 

Up above, as snowy ranges 

Seen across a calm blue sea, 
Full of wonderful, fair changes 

Float the clouds, piled high and free. 
So with wonder, adoration, 

To the mounts does man uplift 
Heart and soul, in admiration 

Of this pure, inspiring gift. 



THE SMALL HORSE-CHESTNUT TREE, 

[On seeing the woodman's mark.] 

'Tis best that they should cut you down 

A small horse-chestnut 'mong the forest trees. 
Here is the woodman's mark — one deep, rough frown 

On the smooth bark. He is the one that frees 
Each life of oak, or elm, or maple trunk. 

What life is all around ! 
And here the deep-brown leaves are torn and shrunk, 

From which, without a sound, 
The life has fled; that lie upon the earth, 

To rest in withered heaps 
Beneath this tree, whose slender girth 

Will soon be circled. How the sunshine creeps 
Across the grass. And this will soon grow o'er 

The spot on which the trunk shall fall, 



58 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

In floods about it will the sunshine pour, 

To warm and strengthen all. 
'Tis not alone that we should live and die 

In selfish personality. The way 
In which we add to this great world of life is why 

We come here; that some day, 
The leaves we scattered ere we were cut down 

Flying afar may take some thought or deed 
To living heart ; or smooth a wayward frown 

By some act, slow-grown, from deep-fallen seed. 
Then let the sunshine glow when we are gone ; 

Then let the freshest flowers bloom fairer still ; 
Perhaps we added one bright spot — just one — 

Upon the grass-grown fields of life's green hill. 



SUNRISE ON PILATUS-KULM, LAKE 
LUCERNE. 

On Pilate's crest we stood, and looked, 
Where the first streaks of rosy light, 

Behind the hills and mountains green, 
Brought them so clear-cut to our sight. 

Then the pink stole around the sky, 
And through the air, superb and grand, 

Rose in their everlasting snow, 
The glories of the Oberland. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Peaks upon peaks, and over all 
A chain of mountains purely white 

Against that roseate, wondrous shade ; 
Lonely, inspiring, awful sight ! 

And beautiful, ethereal, 

Like pyramids of snow they stand, 
The Jungfrau, Monch and Wetterhorn, 

The highest in the Oberland. 

Then watch the light steal down the slopes. 

Turning the bluish shade to white, 
While black the farther sides become ; 

And looking onward to the right 

The bluish shade still lingers there, 
On peaks that still in twilight stand, 

Among their brothers all around, 
Not dreaming of the sunny land. 

Then in the East, the red ball rose 
O'er Rigi's green and wooded crest, 

To drive the silver moon away, 
And morn' star to the distant West. 

Next from the valleys, there arose 
A mist, mysterious, dim and gray, 

That crept up to the mountains high 
As if to hide their peaks away 



59 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

From those who dared to gaze upon 
Such beauty, silent, awful, grand, 

To linger at the highest shrine : 
The snow peaks of the Oberland. 



ON BOARD THE "DAKAHLIAH." 

[On th9 Mediterranean, between Alexandria and Athens.] 

Could the clear sea be more fair or smooth? 

Could the cloud-islands look more white? 
The ship's broad waves are the sounds that soothe, 

The surface is bathed in light. 

The sky and the sea have no boundary line, 

The cloud-lands float on the blue 
Of delicate shades, that with waves combine, 

In one glassy, yet changing hue. 

Ripples follow the swift-going ship 

Like myriad of water bugs dark, 
The broader waves with a deeper dip, 

Form many a wavering mark. 

Nearer and clearer, the purple steeps 

Of the isles of Greece stand out, 
Their peaks reflected in crystal deeps, 

As they lie in clusters fibout. 

And yet how shadowy, distant, dim, 
Seem these lands dreamt of so long, 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 61 

As unreal as the filmy light clouds' brim, 
The isles beloved, renowned in song. 

Which seem most substantial to me, 
Those light cloud-lands of the sky, 

Or the purple isles of the crystal sea? 
I shall find out by-and-by. 



TO THE STATUE OF VOLTAIRE. 

[AT FERNEY, NEAR GENEVA.] 

A little, thin, bent-over, bright-eyed man, 
Still smiling kindly, in the sunny square 

Of a town that he founded and cared for himself, 
In his long fur coat and powdered hair. 

His hat is folded beneath his arm, 

With the other he leans upon his cane, 

Ever watching the people and town 

That he many times rescued from famine and pain. 

On this, warm, bright, beautiful autumn day, 

Old women sit in the little square, 
Near the wise old patriarch of Ferney — 

The benefactor, philosopher, writer, Voltaire. 

The children still smile to see his face ; 

Their grandmothers tell them of times long past 



62 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

When the old man hobbled about the streets, 
Watching his dear town to the last. 

As I look up at the kind, bright face, 

He seems to step down from his pedestal white, 

To speak to the people, to visit the poor, 
Then step back to his silent watch at night. 



A JANUARY BREEZE. 

Said the wind to a maid 

He met by the way, 
"Come on, come on! 

Let's play, let's play! " 
He twisted her veil, 

He tumbled her hair, 
He parted her curls 

Combed out with much care, 
He blew her short cape 

Up over her head, 
Then twisted her hat on one side. 

As I've said, 
It was good fun for him 

Till the maid had departed, 
Then the wind laughed aloud 

As onward he darted. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 63 

NATURE. 

My joy is by the wayside, 

Along some cooling stream, 
Where sparkling waters gently glide, 

And bright waves laugh and gleam. 

My joy is 'mong the flowers wild 

That lift each dainty head, 
Each one a careless, happy child, 

By Nature nursed and fed. 

My joy is in the forest green, 

Where moss has thickly spread 
A fairy forest, rarely seen 

If one but looks o'erhead 

At rustling leaves and branches 

Against the deep blue sky ; 
There are a thousand chances 

That it would be passed by. 

Yet this is a tiny greenwood, 

Where insects small creep by, 
And wonder if they ever could 

Look above a moss-tree high. 

Nature now so fair and charming, 

Nature bright and full of light, 
Nature changing and alarming, 

She is always to our sight 



64 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Wonderful and full of beauty, 
Grand, inspiring, full of thought, 

Nature always does her duty, 

Be she charming, dark, or fraught 

With a storm cloud black and fearful, 
With a smile or with a frown ; 

Be she cheerful, be she tearful, 
On her children she looks down. 

With a tear the plants awaken, 
With a smile the flowers bloom, 

With a laugh the fruit is shaken 
Ripe and glowing ; and the loom 

Is enriched as she grows brighter, 
And when darkest she appears, 

She is making our lives lighter 
By the patient thought of years. 

TO AN UNKNOWN PORTRAIT. 

[Suggested by a Portrait in the National Gallery, London.] 

Ye portraits on the gallery walls 
Marked down below, "Unknown; " 

Ye pictures in this century's halls, 
The ages long have sown 

New thoughts, new faces on the earth. 
Do you not sometimes yearn 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 65 

For that dead century of your birth 

That we can scarce discern, 
Seen far away by your dark eyes 

In memory's distant time? 
You stand far back in shadowy size, 

You glowed once in your prime, 
Upon the canvas seamed and scarr t cl. 

Grown now so dim and dark. 
None think that this your face has marred, 

But gaze at every mark, 
At every stroke of painter's brush, 

Blent deep to colors rich, 
And whisper " He is looking, hush!" 

Ah! can a thought, a wish, 
That passes through an artist's brain 

Last when his name is gone, 
When no one knows whose face is plain 

Within the frame; though but what's done 
Is brought down through the centuries long? 

The eyes look clearly still, 
As deeds, whose influence ever strong, 

Have lost the print of will 
Which first shaped them for future walls, 

Scarce knowing what it did ; 
Whose looks will shine in lofty halls 

When earth itself is hid. 



G6 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 



THE CASTLES OF THE AIR. 

Lit by the half -clouded sun, 

Lofty beyond compare, 
Rise in their changing traceries, 

The Castles of the Air. 

Bulwarks dark and majestic, 
Towers whose heavy walls, 

I know, overlook the sunshine 
That softly behind them falls . 

Walls may be thick and frowning, 
Blackened by massive towers, 

But over them flows the sunshine 
In happy and healthful showers. 

See ! see ! the cloud- walls are falling, 
They sink in the distant west, 

And all that is left is a pathway 
Of light, to a night's sweet rest. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 67 

OVER THE CAMPAGNA. 

A tender blue is the noonday sky, 

Nearer the horizon, white; 
Yellow the smooth Campagna's fields, 

Darker the mountain's height. 

Oh, green and fresh in the distance clear 

Are the wooded Alban hills ; 
With their snow-white villages climbing up 

To kiss the sun, which fills 

The skins of the white and purple grapes 

That heavily hang from the vines ; 
Ripening olives on silver trees, 

Giving the oils and wines. 

A monastery shines on the mountain top 

To check the too eager race, 
Who love their sunny southern slope, 

And bask in the bright sun's face; 

O'erlooking the wide and winsome plain, 

Where down in the misty light, 
The Rome of the present and the past 

Survives from many a fight. 

That giant dome of Michael's art 

Above all lesser things, 
Higher still in the wanderer's thought 

Rises ancient Rome, the wings 



68 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Of the eagle ever soaring aloft 

To guard her city old ; 
Though conquerors come, and conquerors go, 

Who dares loose that eagle's hold? 

Rome ! Rome ! as ever strong, 

As ever, thou art free ! 
Thy ruins scorn the pilferer's touch 

And strangers ever bend the knee 
Of homage, lasting long, 

To thee. 

Still farther off the ocean rises, 

A blue line 'gainst the sky, 
By which the first of Roman race 

Came from Troy's walls so high. 

The ages glide so swiftly, 

As drops of rosy wine ; 
But we dream away in the golden age, 

As if we had found the mine 

Of happiness, everlasting, bright, 

In a vine-clad Alban hill, 
And sing away in the summer sun 

With never a thought of ill. 

Forever, forever, under the vine, 
Come rest thy careworn head, 

And think of naught but a whispering breeze, 
Stealing down to thy leafy bed. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 69 

THE POOR-HOUSE WINDOWS. 

At seven fifteen, the fourteenth of July, 
When the sun had sunk low down in the sky, 
And the clouds, gold-rimmed and flecked with pink, 
Seemed now to expand and now to shrink, 

The poor-house windows, that high up stand 
On the eastern hills, and from all the land 
Surrounding are seen, began to glow, 
Shining and dazzling, row upon row. 

Were they on fire? All seemed so bright, 

Those squares of ruddy, fiery light; 

The tiny windows above the eaves 

Had caught the sparkle. The sunlight weaves 

A semblance of flames to the topmost points. 
How long it lasts ! 'Tis strange it appoints 
The home of paupers to gladden and light 
Before the world is left to the night. 

The winter evenings must warmer be 
To those who so late the sun may see ; 
The summer sunsets must seem more fair 
As the brightness lingers and wavers there. 

And now it is fading, the clouds in the west 
Are silver and gray ; a wind full of rest 
And gentleness rustles among the trees ; 
The night is come and the daylight flees. 



70 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

SUNSET ON THE COLUMBIA RIVER, 

[OREGON.] 

Sunset on broad Columbia ! Burnished gold 

Reflected from the sky's deep lighted edge, 
Which mountains, bluest of the blue, enfold, 

Above the green-banked river — one long ledge 
Of deepest turquoise 'neath the amber sky; 

The stream another sky, smooth glazed below ; 
Between four giant snow peaks, clear and high, 

Their huge forms on the sea of color throw. 

Mount Helens all in snowy mantle dressed, 

A gorgeous, marble, scintillating dome, 
Where rosy light her outlines have impressed — 

A perfect wave of sunset tinted foam, — 
From base to summit rising o'er the range, 

Not even her white foot hidden by the hills, 
Calling up thoughts and fancies new and strange 

That all the waving light with glory fills. 

And then Mount Rainier, peering o'er the heights, 

To view Columbia flowing broadly by, 
Though distant, clearly seen on such June nights, 

Its double point all whitely clad and high. 
Mount Adams, too, is far away, its peaks 

Standing as crystal on the golden sky ; 
Not glorious, but purely white, it seeks 

Each color-loving, mountain-loving eye. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 71 

Mount Jefferson, the pyramid, called "Hail!" 

To Mount Hood, loveliest peak, in rosy light, 
Until the sky tints growing faint and pale, 

Mount Hood, a phantom, rose up in the night. 
Glorious in sunlight, delicate in shade, 

A dream of rose tints, spirit of the night, 
Your beauties ever change, but never fade — 

The subtle, wondrous, beauteous power of light. 



UNDER THE APPLE TREES. 

Sweet and fresh is the southern breeze 
Under the low-hung apple trees ; 
Green is the grass 
To those that pass, 
Under the apple trees. 

Gnarled and brown are the branches old, 
But robes of leaves their trunks enfold ; 
All is so fair, 
Lingering there, 
Under the apple trees. 

Shadows and lights that dance and play 
With the golden-rod beside the way; 
Meadow all bright, 
Then the fading light, 
Under the apple trees. 



72 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE, 

Outlines uncertain, and gray and dim, 
No one can tell which is leaf or limb. 
Witching times these 
In the southern breeze, 
Under the apple trees. 



THE CROCUS. 

Though the wind is still cold 
There's a warmth in the air. 

A longing to fold 

All things that are fair 

In one's arms; and we seek 
In the grass for an hour, 

The anemone meek 

Has not lifted her flower. 

Of a delicate pink 

Shading up to pure white, 
As the fair dawn, the link 

Between darkness and light. 

Yet the grass has grown green 
With its transparent blades. 

When held up between 
The sun, all the shades 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 73 

Are fresh, delicate, clear. 

There was no other thing, 
Though we sought far and near 

For the tokens of spring, 

When under a tree, 

Sheltered well from the cold, 
By ' l The Green Gate " I see 

A gay crocus, bold. 

One small yellow flower 

And its grass-like green leaves 
Springing up— a rich dower 

The sun sometimes weaves 

Before other creations ; 

A fair cloth of gold, 
Worth more than all nations 

To fashion and mold. 

What a message of hope, 

Of joy and content, 
Growing on this green slope, 

The life earliest sent ! 

The evergreens watch you, 

The vines clasp your stem, 
The gentlest winds touch you, 

The spring's first pure gem. 



74 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

YELLOWSTONE PARK. 

The tall shaft of the Golden Gate, 

Majestic, ushers in 
To sights that long for man did wait 

In silence ; or with din 
Of rushing waters boiling loud, 

Of quick escaping steam, 
That hangs above, a misty cloud 

Through which the fountains gleam. 

In the liquid depths of a pool of green 

Shines the clear "Morning Glory," 
Beneath the surface, calm, serene, 

Its deep cup spreading, hoary 
From minerals in the boiling drops 

That bubble up the stem, 
Reaching below the great workshops 

That deck this strangest gem. 

The geysers roar, and spout, and splosh, 
From mouths of depth unknown ; 

Around about, the hot waves dash, 
The earth gives many a groan. 

Not far away a peaceful lake 
Lies sleeping 'mong the hills, 

Its azure waves a picture make 
That all the distance fills 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 75 

With lights and shadows. On the Bay 

Of Naples, in the gleam, 
I seem to hear the soft winds say 

'Tis an Italian dream. 

The purple clouds piled fold on fold 

Across the waves so bright ; 
A face cut in the mountains bold, 

An Indian's, 'gainst the light 
Is clear cut, black, and sharp defined. 

Then to the canon deep, 
With rainbow colors brightly lined 

On precipices steep ; 

Tall spires, castles, cut and worn; 

The river, far, far down, 
Falling below, all rent and torn 

On rocks that glare and frown; 
Torn in a thousand drops of spray, 

Snowy and clear, like pearls pure white, 
Flowing fast on its bright green way 

'Mongst cliffs and crags of light. 

The wonderful, the beautiful, the grand 
In this great Park of Nature find a place, 

From geyser mouths to lake, and rainbow sand, 
The dark pine woods and precipices grace. 



76 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

HEIDELBERG. 

The broad low window all in light, 

The garden dim and dark, 
The students, singing through the night, 

Send echoing music from the park ; 
The wooded hill beyond, a wall 

Of blackness, where one ray 
From lofty heights its light lets fall — 

A glittering star, astray. 

Morning, there is the castle old ! 

That gray, majestic pile, 
Last night deep-hid in shadowy fold 

Of evening's mantle, all the while. 
Up by the winding, shady path 

Above the Neckar's stream ; 
What charm this ancient woodland hath, 

A strange mediaeval dream ! 

" The moat is deep, the tower is high, 

The walls are still upright, 
But enter, ladye, pass not by, 

At the castle gate waits a faithful knight. 
Come through the great watch tower, 

The coat-of-arms, o'er the gate, 
Emblem of feudal strength and power, 

Of a mighty and olden state. 



Come through the great watch tower — 

— Heidelberg. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 77 

" Rupert built this Gothic wing, 

The imperial eagle carved thereon, 
In fourteen hundred crowned King 

Of Rome. At Rhens he his robes put on. 
Crossing the level road again, 

Pause at this ancient well a time, 
Upheld by columns that Charlemagne 

Once placed in his palace at Ingelheim. 

" Still glorious stand the inner walls, 

Which emperors' statues and saints' adorn; 
On their stony heads the sun's rays fall 
Unbidden; no beggar more forlorn." 
" Interminable seem these winding ways 

Sir Knight, half- ruined, and half -walled in, 
Traces of halls in better days, 

And many shadowy rooms therein . ' ' 

" Come to the balcony, stranger fair; 
In this turret rest, look down 
At the clustered houses below us, where 
Is passing, the life of a modern town; 
While the octagon tower above us stands, 
Clasping young ivy, a century old; " 
" Sir Knight ! " the ladye held up her hands, 

" Sir Knight ! young ivy ! " His brow grew cold, 

" Come back to the court," he grimly said. 
They passed through an archway low, 



78 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

And stood, as the knight had silently led, 

In the sun's last, fading glow, 
Before a lofty facade, whexe placed 

In niches, many and high, 
Quaintly carved statues the spaces graced, 

Princes of thrones that in dust now lie. 

" My niche is there," the knight bent low, 
''Farewell, 'tis my only day 
In the century," wan his face did grow, 
Cold his eyes; his hair was gray. 
" Farewell ! " The ladye, trembling, turned ; 
Then upward gazed from the courtyard lone- 
The sun's last, lingering brightness burned 
High over a knightly form of stone. 



TO PIKE'S PEAK. 

LFrom the Plain.] 

Giant of the pleasing valleys, 
Sentinel of the boundless plain, 

Clear-cut on a sky of azure, 

Drawing o'er it clouds and rain ; 

Broad, majestic, red, and barren, 
Boulder-strewn above the pines, 

Cherishing the fairest blossoms 
In its hard and rugged lines. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 79 

Peak of grandeur ! Peak of beauty ! 

Found a century since by Pike ; 
Rearing high its rocky headland, 

Seeming misty clouds to strike ; 

Beckoning to the snow and rain-drops. 

Clasping close each flower bright, 
Till, straight looking towards the " Far West," 

Pike's Peak bids the sun " Good Night." 

DON AND I. 

Of all life's countless pleasures, 

The happiest, best, beside, 
That is new at each day's dawning, 

Is the early horseback ride ; 

With the dew-drops on the meadow 

Like meshes of pearl-strung lace, 
The sunbeams slanting across them, 

The fresh breeze in your face. 

We understand each other 

Fleet-footed Don, and I. 
What rides we have had together 

When no one else was nigh ! 

Over the windy hilltops, 
On through the wood's deep shade, 



80 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Stopping to pick a blossom, 
Or rest in a sunny glade ; 

Don, with a thoughtless freedom, 

Eating the flowers of gold, 
That I try to pick on the saddle 

From their tall stalks. When the cold 

Has driven the last blooms southward, 

O'er the hard and frosty way 
We will speed, till the glow of the motion 

Has tempered the cold of the day. 

Oh ! nothing can freshen the spirits, 
Or rest hand and foot in an hour, 

As a ride through the woods and the meadows 
In their beauty of leaf, twig and flower. 



TO AN OLD SATCHEL. 

[Covered with Foreign Hotel and Custom-house Posters.l 

Old satchel ! old satchel ! all covered with scars, 

With bruises and scratches, 

You've been through the wars; 
Have traveled on high seas, and tumbled in cars; 

Been thrown down the hatches 

Through all kinds of snatches ; 
Gone headlong in 'buses, and would have seen stars. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 81 

Full often, if only you'd had heels or head; 

Yet still you have patches 

That do well instead ; 
For they show in large letters where'er you were led; 

Some stuck close in batches, 

Some round, the eye catches ; 
And all advertising in gold, white, or red. 

Far Constantinople first here has its due 

On one side ; 'tis interminably long, 
And evidently greatly despises the hue 

Of the large round Hanover patch of bright blue 
That it doesn't think there should belong; 
Considering it still a great wrong 

Not to stand 'mong a far Eastern few. 

Close by, a small stamp of Verona proclaims 
The town of love songs and romance, 
Of faithful, brave knights and beautiful dames, 

And thought brings up many fair names 
That those noted dramas enhance, 
Where, seen by a lingering glance, 

Is the " balcony," famous and old window frames. 

There's a custom-house mark on this same battered side, 
And with chalk you are pretty well " cus'd; " 
But don't this respectable satchel deride, 



82 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

There are some other stains, worn leather beside, 
And a good deal of most ancient dust ; 
An ink stain, if tell it I must; 

Its catches still shine with deep pride. 

Then there's one with the Pyramid, Sphinx and the Nile; 

Next it Berne, with a bear; 

And a yellow one which, in the greatest of style, 
Has Dresden upon it. And many a mile 

Has it gone. 'Tis a curio rare, 

Preserved with surprising good care 
'Twill be pensioned, and then put on file. 



A MEMORY OF THE " IONIA." 

" The Plain of Troy! " the captain said. 

We stood beside him on the bridge, 
And looked where many a Grecian led 

His warriors brave. Far off a ridge 
Of mountains rose against the blue ; 

Between the slopes and restless sea 
Green grasses sparsely scattered grew 

Upon the level, far as we 
Could gaze; a few trees, where a stream 

Wound from the hillside to the shore. 
Your head on the ship's rail, sit and dream 

Of Greece and Troy in days of yore. 



Now along the narrow street, 

Crossed with high and slender stepping-stones 
Touched by gay Pompeiian feet. 

— Naples and Pompeii 



THE VAKIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 83 



NAPLES AND POMPEII. 

Before I visited the city, 

I had read on Naples bay, 
With passion born of nearness, 

Bulwer's " Last Days of Pompeii; " 

In the warm Italian sunlight, 
Shining white the curving shore, 

Green the hill of Posilipo, 

Blue and smooth the bay's wave-floor. 

Sparkling as if set with jewels 

In mosaics' thousand tints, 
From the whitest, clearest ripples, 

To the deepest, bluest dints. 

Far out rises rocky Capri, 

Purple at the early morn, 
When the bay is filled with fishing boats ; 

Then the brighter lights adorn 

Its high crests with greenest foliage ; 

Sunset comes. It fades again 
Into dreams the most delicious, 

Resting to the heart and brain. 



84 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Oh, dear Naples, how I love thee! 

As I walk beside the shore, 
Even when the skies are threatening, 

And the waves, with sullen roar, 

Beat against the rocky barrier, 
Tossing up the foaming spray ; 

'Gainst the shore they beat far higher 
On the last day of Pompeii. 

Black Vesuvius lowered over, 

Clothed in clouds of twisting smoke ; 

Then the restless earth was shaken, 
All its sleeping powers awoke ; 

And the hot and seething lava 
Covered Herculaneum soon; 

Stifling ashes showered over, 
All the hot air seemed to swoon. 

Ashes sifted to the sea shore, 
Buried deep each narrow way 

In the rich, the brilliant city, 

Gay and laughing, bright Pompeii. 

'Twas the end. Yet look, the city 
Has come back, back from the dead ! 

Though the people fled in terror, 

Saved themselves, here in their stead 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 85 

Lived the town. They long have perished, 

But the city, saved to-day 
By Vesuvius ; for in this time 

'Twould have surely passed away. 

Here the Forum stands as ever, 

A great, level, stone-paved space ; 
Broken columns all around it, 

At one end the temple's face, 

Steps that lead up to the altar ; 

Now along the narrow street, 
Crossed with high and slender stepping-stones 

Touched by gay Pompeiian feet. 

Here the chariots rolling over 

Wore a deep and lasting rut ; 
All the house walls still are standing; 

Floors are paved; rooms frescoed, but 

All is silent. Yes, 'tis truly 

But a "city of the dead," 
Though the sun seeks to revive 

Its roofless homes. A flower's head 

Peeps between the stones and mortar. 

Bright the frescoed gods and wreaths, 
Kept beneath the close-packed ashes ; 

Standing here one quickly breathes 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

The fresh air, and sometimes glances 
Toward the mountains and the bay, 

But the thoughtless " lazzaroni" 
Never think of that sad day. 

In this garden Glaucus rested ! 

Watched the tortoise's dull track 
(The tortoise, found, is now at Naples), 

Watched it creeping forward, back; 

And without the walls a villa 
On the stately street of tombs, 

Where each monument elaborate, 

White and square, still proudly looms; 

Villa of the rich old Diomede, 

Larger in its court and hall 
Than the houses of the city, 

Overgrown the stones and wall 

With white flowers sweet as honey, 
Waving grass, and thick-grown weed; 

Crumbling are the doors and stairways 
That to rooms deserted lead. 

But 'tis peopled by the shadows 
Of the ones who passed away 

Or fled, frightened, from the city 
On the last day of Pompeii. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 87 



THE SONG OF THE STARS. 

The triple stars in Orion's belt 

Flitter, and nicker, and gleam, 
While under the trees so dreamily 

Streams the glowing moon's soft beam; 
There, in a sky of azure deep, 

Are set the gems of night, 
Brighter than diamonds, more lasting, true, 

In their softening, watching light ; 
Fairer than diamonds, yes, fairer by far 

These jewels of all mankind, 
Lightening, sparkling, brightening, 

Come hither, come seek and find; 
Come into the glorious starlight, 

And breathe in the noiseless tale, 
That the stars are forever singing 

To the moonlight, pure and pale. 

A STRING OF GREEK BEADS. 

[Bought at Athens, Greece.] 

What hangs from the cabinet's corner there? 

A string of smooth- worn beads, 
Shining from fingers' constant wear, 

Pierced, oblong, hardened seeds. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE, 

'Tis the plaything of the modern Greek, 
Not the child, but the man; as he talks, 

A restless motion his smooth hands seek, 
As he waits for a friend, or walks 

At a leisurely pace, in an Athens' square 

Where each political view 
Of the many parties, and how they fare, 

Is discussed in daily review. 

On the shaded deck of an East-bound ship 

The Hellenic captain stands, 
And as he watches the rise and dip 

Of the prow, the beads in his hands 

Rattle, as nervously to and fro 

He slips them from hand to hand, 
When the warm South winds with softness blow 

From the shores of the Afric land. 

'Twas down at the foot of Hermes street 

In an Athens' corner shop 
We chanced an obliging man to meet, 

For, though oft the beads would drop 

As we helped him to string them on stronger cords, 

He picked them up every one, 
And bade us farewell with unknown words 

When his trade with us was done. 



THE VAKIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

So, on the cabinet's corner there, 
Hangs one of those selfsame strings ; 

Where are its former comrades? where? 
In the land where Sappho sings. 



SUNSET 



Out of the meadow springing, 

Sweet clover, white and red ; 
Bees for their honey winging, 

Where the daisy waves its head ; 

Graceful and slender yarrow 

Its rounded spray uplifts ; 
The grass blades, straight and narrow, 

Toss ever in shining rifts. 

The orchard, beyond the woodland, 
Deep green on the fair blue sky, 

Where the snowy banks of a cloudland 
Float, slowly dissolving, by. 

The peaks of an Alpine chain they seem, 
Heaped up to a dizzy height ; 

The Oberland in a gentle dream, 
Fairer than dreams of night. 



90 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

The Meramec hills in the amber West 
Stand out in deep blue lines ; 

Of all fair sights, home sights are best, 
Where restfulness combines 

With beauty of the day and night, 
The sunshine and the moon, 

The cooling woods, the flowers bright, 
The charming hours of June. 



AT VIRGIL'S TOMB.— NAPLES. 

[After a visit to the region about Lake Avernus, near Naples.] 

To Virgil's Tomb we wend our way, 

Through vines trained high in garlands green, 

Studded with white and purple fruit, 
And olive trees of silver sheen. 

Up to a hollow in the hill, 

Above a busy Naples' street; 
But quiet, restful, shaded, lone, 

Steps worn but by true pilgrims' feet, 

For the path is steep, and the hill is high, 

Three children show the way 
To a ruined mound, in a crevice deep, 

Where once was placed a poet's clay. 



Till Cape Misenum rose in sight — 

At Virgil's Tomb. — Naples. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 91 

The niches round the low arched room 

Are empty. Not a single trace 
Of urns or pillars, snowy white, 

That once this ruined tomb did grace. 

But garlands twine, and vines wreathe round 
The openings made in roof and wall 

To honor him who sung of fields, 
And woods, and bravest heroes all. 

By his deft hand long fallen Troy 

Rises again before our eyes ; 
From the wooden horse pour forth the Greeks, 

Through the dark street ^neas hies 

With old Anchises on his back, 

The boy lulus by his side, 
While following close upon his steps 

His patient wife does silent glide. 

And then they sailed upon the sea, 

They wandered North, and South, and West, 
Driven by storms and hardest fates 

From shore to shore without a rest 

Till Cape Misenum rose in sight, (Bay of BaiaB) 

And Cumse's white and jagged hill, 
They gladly landed on the beach, 

And resting, ate and drank their fill. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

But good iEneas hastened on 
To find the Sibyl, old and gray, 

In Cumae's rock beside the shore, 
To ask, to beg, the hidden way, 

Reaching far down to Pluto's realms 
Where old Anchises long did roam ; 

The Priestess pointed to the wood 
That closed about her dreary home. 

" Search for the golden branch," she cried, 
" And if your life be pure and right, 

'Twill yield with ease unto your hand, 
Then bring it back to me at night." 

iEneas sought the dark grove through, 
And after struggles, long and deep, 

Found the bright branch, upon a tree 
That grew along the hillsides steep 

'Round dread A vermis' gloomy lake. 

The aged Sibyl led him down, 
Where in the rock a passage long 

Pierced to the place of dread renown. 

Through caverns long and high they went, 
Down, down a steeper, narrower way, 

Until they reached the blackest Styx, 
Par from the warm, clear light of day. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 93 

Holding aloft the golden branch, 

Hero and Sibyl on the brink, 
Beguiled the boatman of the dead 

Until, before he half could think 

That living forms were moving o'er 
The wave, forbidden but to shades, 

They reached the distant, gloomy shore, 
Where memory of the past, that fades 

So quickly in this busy life, 

Still lives in forms of deepest woe, 
And farther on in brightest light, 

Here meet again the friend and foe. 

Ah ! many are the pictures strange, 

And beautiful and thrilling too, 
That this great poet gave to us. 

He stands among the shining few. 

Farewell, ye vineyards, olives, pines! 

Farewell, green Posilipo's hill! 
Your memory is a golden dream, 

That long and oft my thoughts will fill, 

With scenes so fair, so lovely, bright; 

With breath of oleanders, pines; 
With sweetest grapes of clearest hue, 

With Virgil's everlasting lines. 



94 THE VAKIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

THE RAINBOW AT LUCERNE 

It rained all day at fair Lucerne, 

The clouds hung o'er the mountains high, 

Pilatus wore his cap of gray, 

Like molten lead the lake did lie. 

But suddenly the sun broke through, 
And flooded all the lake with light, 

The slopes of Rigi, smooth and clear, 
Was ever such a sight ! 

A rainbow spanned the lake of green, 

And stretched its ends from shore to shore, 

Arch over arch of colors bright, 
Surpassing sights of ancient lore. 

Full twenty minutes joined the banks, 
And covered lake, and mount, and town 

With a sheen so wonderful, so grand, 
It seemed the light had all come down 

From every part of earth and sky 

To make this picture, wondrous, bright, 

To join a hundred thousand drops 
In one grand spectacle of light. 

And soon old Pilate raised his head 

To cast aside the mist of gray ; 
The sun shone brightly on his crest, 

The lake was dark no more that day. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 95 



ON LAKE LUCERNE. 

I saw a stalwart youth to-day 
In trousers short, and alp array, 
The Edelweiss was in his hat. 
Do you suppose he climbed for that? 

Or rushed up Rigi's sloping side, 

For surely 'tis a thrilling ride ! 

Then bought the flowers at Vitznau town 

To win a passing brief renown? 



TO A GERMAN HELMET. 

[A PICTURE OF STRASSBURG.] 

Your polished, flashing, rounded crown 
Shines in the streets of every town 
In German land ; where music calls 
The loiterers to the doors and walls, 
And lines of glistening guns file down 
The quaint streets of an ancient town. 
'Tis war, war, war, where'er you go; 
Each talks and dreams of vanquished foe, 
And half the men you chance to meet 
Wear uniforms. The drum's loud beat 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Awakens one at break of day, 

When rural guards take their brisk way 

Along the roads, for march at morn, 

And later, all dust-soiled and worn, 

But making merry music still, 

Return to barracks on the hill. 

You gleam on every soldier strong 

Who proudly walks among the throng, 

Erect, unmoved in face, beneath 

The shining steel ; with sword in sheath 

Clanging upon the paving stones, 

Reminding one of heroes' bones. 

How you are polished by his hand 

To flash at concerts, in this land, 

Where every open, shaded space 

Is set with tables and a place 

For music ! There the helmets shine 

As swiftly passes rosy wine, 

And more of beer than aught else known. 

Where are there enough hop vines grown 

For German beer? Music, and war, 

And beer, the occupations are ; 

And so the helmet sees it all, 

But will it ever hear a call 

To war again? That time is past; 

But still the helmet long will last, 

And many years will soldiers drill 

Within the barracks on the hill. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 97 

THE JUNGFRAU. 

[FEOM INTERLAKEN.] 
JUNGFRAU, 

Spotless brow, 
Mantle white, 
Smoothest slope, 
Radiant with hope, 
Glorious sight. 

Peering out, 
Dispelling doubt, 
Awe-full at dawn, 
Dazzling fair 
'Mid earth and air, 
Outline clear-drawn. 

Mountains gray- 
Guard the way, 
In the valley deep, 
Dark with trees, 
O'er which one sees 
The snowy steep. 

Down that green vale 
It rises pale, 
Bride of the Day, 
Soaring above, 
As perfect love, 
Beauteous alway. 



08 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE, 

An Alpine rose 
When sunset glows 
In deepening light ; 
An edelweiss 
Against the skies 
Of darkening night. 

Snowy heights burning, 
Deep-tinted turning, 
Twilight here, sunlight there, 
Vision so bright, 
Wondrously white 
Through the clear air. 



JANUARY AND JUNE. 

[Suggested by the discovery that January and June were missing in a pack- 
age of old magazines.] 

January and June are gone! 

Did they run away together? 
How could they join their wayward hands — 

Such different kinds of weather? 

Among the fair month-sisters 
They never were known to agree. 

Why should they have decided 
As friends and companions to flee? 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 99 

Tis wonderful beyond measure, 

And if, in the coming year, 
June is a trifle wintry, 

A trifle chilling and drear, 

Or New Year a trifle sultry 

And warm in the midst of the day, 

You will know that they went together 
And together have lost their way. 



A SMALL ROMAN LAMP. 

Of what Roman's head do you bear the stamp, 

Tiny, earthen, red-brown hand-lamp? 

A shallow, circular, rounded bowl, 

Shaped for the wick at one end, with a hole ; 

At the other with handle for finger and thumb, 

Oh, head of a Roman, why are you dumb? 

The light that flared from the opening small, 

Beside your head, lit floor and wall, 

Or a soldier's face, or a monk's sad eye, 

Or a lounger that near your flame passed by. 

Perchance the porter at palace gate 

Was cheered by your gleam at an hour late, 

As he waited his master or guarded the door 

In troublous times. Perchance on the floor — 

A cold stone floor — you were placed below 

The shrine of a god, and flickering low, 



100 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

You shone on the walls with statues graced, 

In a temple the " Sacra Via" faced, 

A way that the king with pomp did tread 

From the Capitol Hill (called from " Caput," head) 

To the Arch of Titus, with structures lined, 

The fairest marbles that Rome could find. 

Here is the Vestal Virgins' shrine; 

There, above on the hill, combine — 

To form an imposing ruined mass — 

The palace homes of the highest class 

Of ancient Rome. Whence did you come? 

Yes, you will be forever dumb ; 

But I know you were bought in a Roman street, 

I know you have guided a Roman's feet, 

I know you were molded from Roman clay 

And have seen the light of a Roman day. 

LIFE'S GARDEN. 

He who his own self does conquer 
Wins the world at one quick blow, 

Never is the way so crooked 
That he cannot make it grow 

Straight and clear, a pleasant pathway 
Through a garden bright and long; 

Keep it always fresh with roses ; 
Root out each weed small but strong. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 101 

Think not that this is a garden 

Hedged around by high stone walls, 

Where no pleasures gaily wander, 
Where no sunshine warmly falls. 

'Tis all open, sweet with flowers. 

Gladness comes like sunshine down, 
As the owner, ever seeking, 

Pulls up each tough weed's dark frown. 

So all life will glow and blossom 

With no wilderness of weeds; 
Bright, and ever stronger growing 

From the well-sown, early seeds. 

If you think the one who wrote this 

Doesn't know enough, just look 
For the facts I've briefly mentioned, 

In a larger gardening book. 



FIRENZE. 

[FLORENCE.] 

Upon the broad Lungarno 
A stranger walked that day 

In the fairest of art cities, 
Beside the level way, 

Now stopping where a stone wall 
Invited him to rest, 



102 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

To watch the gentle Arno 

Float slowly towards the West. 
A bridge here spans the river,* 

So the houses ever meet, 
And the shops, built close together, 

O'er the waters form a street. 
Little shops with gay, bright trinkets, 

Filling windows cramped and small. 
Stranger still, above the housetops, 

On the roof, is built a hall 
For dark portraits old and stately, 

Joining galleries large, and hung 
With the gems of many ages ; 

Statues too, that had been flung 
From their pedestals in battle, 

Covered with the dust of years, 
Found by workmen digging deeply ; 

Some were given with oaths and tears 
In a country, fallen, conquered 

By imperial Rome's strong hand; 
Some were chiseled from the native rock 

By the genius of this land. 
Brave Niobe and her children 

Brought together here again, 
In their varying expressions, 

Gaze with hope or cry with pain. 
Portraits of the popes and painters ; 
* Ponte Vecchio. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 103 

Flora, with her golden hair;* 
Countless others by old masters, 

But not one so glorious, fair, 
As Murillo's grave Madonna 

In the Pitti. Faint lights gleam 
Round the Virgin's head mysterious. 

'Tis a vision and a dream. 
On he walked through echoing hallways, 

Studied gems and the array 
Of carvings, caskets, marbles, 

Wealth of a far-distant day. 
Out in the Boboli Gardens, 

Stately paths and walls and trees, 
And long arbors formed by branches, 

Marble nymphs that gaily seize 
Bunches of the crisp brown leaves. 

Summer time has passed away, 
Gentle autumn now is coming, 

Earth has donned a bright array. 
You may wander by the river, 

You may wander through the park ; 
Speechless stand before the Duomo 

Snowy, chiseled, cut and marked 
In a thousand airy tracings, 

Figures, faces, twisting shafts; 
At the Baptistery doorways 

Whose closing softly wafts 

* Titian. 



104 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

A thought of the great Michael : 

They, in shining bronze, were fit 
For the doors of Paradise. 

That gilt is worn off, but still lit 
With the deep words of the sculptor. 

His house not far away* 
Reveals the home-life of the artist 

On canvas, stone. What can we say? 
For the man was learned in many arts, 

Each of which one deems great. 
Here he lived. His tiny workshop, 

Tools, pen, carvings — all relate 
To his strong life in its chilhhood, 

Ere the Moses of his art 
Came to life — most stern of statues, 

Grandly formed, it stands apart 
In one's thoughts from works of marble. 

Others lived here. In the square 
By the Church of Santa Croce 

Dante stands with stately air : 
On his head a wreath of laurel, 

Round his form a flowing gown. 
What a profile for a sculptor ! 

Some as equal in renown 
Within Santa Croce 's shadows 

Lie to dream the years away. 
Rossini, Michael, Galileo. 

* Casa Buonarotti. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 105 

Ne'er will the clear southern day- 
Shine again upon their faces ; 

But our thoughts have grown more clear, 
And our hearts become the warmer 

As we see their works, or hear 
The great thoughts that were for others. 

When their forms had passed away 
To the dim, dark Santa Croce, 

Earth was given its brightest day. 

TO A WASTE-PAPER BASKET. 

I wonder how many thoughts you hold 

Confided by pages torn? 
How many secrets you could unfold, 

And messages many adorn 
With words that lay between the lines, 

Flying out as the paper parted ; 
Dates and numbers, and mystic signs 

Set free by a tear, and started 
On a whirling journey round and round 

In the basket? How many a thought, 
Stately or merry, with bow or bound, 

As the mood of the writer taught ; 
Till with half-closed eyes I seem to see 

An incense rise in the air 
From all these messages set free 

By each little cut or tear : 



106 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE, 

An incense that blends in a rosy mist, 
For I'll dream all the words were kind. 

The unkind ones that have been missed 
I shall try hard never to find. 

HISTORIC LEAVES. 

[GERMAN CASTLES.] 

Where'er there stands a ruin high 
Rearing its huge tower to the sky, 
Thick vines of ivy o'er it creep; 
Now falling in a daring leap 

From some old casement deep and barred, 
By weather, time, and long war scarred; 
Now with its leaves the sturdy plant 
Glides up the walls, all sunk and slant, 

And hides the cracks and openings wide 
With strong tough branches side by side. 
The stones between look grander still, 
Decked with the vine, as does the hill 

Which, clothed in woods of cooling green, 
And bare crags shining gray between, 
Ne'er tries the eye with all sides rough, 
And intersperses green enough 

To make it all a grand fair scene 

Of rocks and woods and treetops green. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 107 

Then let the ivy ever cling, 
Ye ruins of which poets sing! 

It clings about your hoary walls, 

As do the legends of those halls 

Where knights so brave all things did dare, 

Long fought, long sought, and oft did swear 

Allegiance to their prince or king. 
Of those times did the minstrels sing; 
But 'tis far best to sit and dream 
Beside a sparkling, singing stream, 

And look up at a castle old 
Among the waving pine trees bold ; 
And let the legends wander by, 
Up through the forest, dark and high, 

While all the tales are gently sung 
By Nature's minstrel, ever young; 
While flags wave on the castle wall, 
And mysteries lurk in pine trees tall. 



MIND PICTURES, 

'Tis very queer 
How plain, how clear, 
Past scenes are to the mind. 
True nature bright, 



108 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

Bathed in sunlight, 
Our brains can ever find. 

The water shines, 

The wave combines 
In thousand glistening hues; 

The cobble stones, 

So hard on bones, 
Even through the thickest shoes. 

A shining dome, 

A morning's roam 
Through some gray, ancient street; 

A tiny shop 

Where we did stop ; 
Stones touched by heroes' feet. 

A shady wood 

Where statues stood, 
So slender, white and fair; 

A waving palm, 

The sea so calm, 
A winding, stony stair. 

An Arab guide 

With stately stride ; 
A donkey's jingling chain; 

A Bedouin wild 

Who gaily smiled; 
An ancient ruined fane. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 109 

The purple isles, 

The misty miles, 
The ruins white as snow; 

A carrier strong, 

A careless song; 
Then how the winds did blow! 

A fountain old, 

A story told, 
The Danube's yellow stream; 

A picture fine, 

A mystic sign, 
The sea's rough, sullen gleam. 

The mist and smoke, 

A passing joke, 
The fresh green English fields. 

A last farewell, 

A tinkling bell ; 
The sea my pencil wields. 

A clear bright morn, 

A star forlorn, 
The rippling wave and foam; 

Fire Island Light, 

A glorious sight ; 
America, my home. 



110 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

SWANNANOA. 

[Near Ashville, N. C] 

Fiery glows the Southern sunset, 

Black the distant range, outlined 
On the day's most beauteous story 

By night's waving heights defined ; 
Up and upward, sinking, rising 

Till Mount Pisgah's tree-decked throne 
Culminates the ebon background, 

Where the sun sets wild and lone. 

Nearer, nearer, as the distant 

Peaks are darkened, in the light 
Round hills autumn-decked are shining, 

As some glorious jewel might; 
Red oak, spots of blazing crimson, 

Maple, gold and rich among 
Browner leaves, or where a huge pine 

Cool green, near the light is flung. 

Swannanoa, winding, silent, 

At our feet, among the wood, 
On where shallow stretches ripple, 

And the black-skinned fisher stood. 
Swannanoa, Swannanoa, 

Sliding, gliding through the hills ; 
Underneath the horses treading, 

How each hoof-beat splashes, trills 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. Ill 

At the deep and shady fording. 

Close beside a farm-house gray, 
Bare and leaning, chimney crumbling, 

Standing there as if to say, 
" Wind on river in your steep banks, 

Laugh on, I must leave you soon, 
For your life is always morning, 

Mine has lingered long past noon. 

" Mine is fading, as the boarding 

Of my shaking walls and roof, 
Man will soon with caution leave me, 

Nature will not stand aloof. 
So, as long as my head rises 

O'er your moving, singing way, 
Will you greet me at the dawning 

Of each long and dreamy day?" 

" Greet you!" trilled the singing river, 
" 'Tis my place in life to greet 
Every friend, and every stranger 

On my way I chance to meet. 
For the earth's deep beauties ever 

Mirrored are within my eyes, 
Grace and joyousness of Nature 

That in my heart never dies. 

" Soft the winds that tell of mountains, 
Sweet to me leaves floating by, 



112 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

And the field-flowers looking downward 

At my image of the sky. 
Every singer's song is tender, 

Sinking deep into my ear, 
I shall greet thee then as ever, 

True is Nature, do not fear." 



ATTIC FANCIES. 

Slowly the headlands rear above the waves, 
Softly the storied sea the deep hull laves, 
Slender, on hills red-white, in lasting peace 
Stand your fair ruins, ever charming Greece, 
Oh ! the first marble temple that we saw, 
Wrapped round in ancient, all-pervading awe ; 
Then rose the city of the Attic plain, 
And all its history was lived again : 
Lives, lives of past war ages, how they flocked 
Upon that sunny plain, when Fancy knocked 
At stern Reality's fast-crumbling door, 
Where cold, clear facts can never enter more. 
Drop your anchor in the round, deep-sheltered bay 
" The Piraeus," port of Athens of to-day, 
Then take the road that still leads to the town, 
Between the sites of twin- walls crumbled down 
That joined the fortress city to the bay. 
How many, many feet have trod the way ! 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 113 

How many hearts, upon the plain 

Have throbbed and sobbed, nor lived their lives in vain. 
Though modern Athens is but young and small, 
There lie ruins under many a fresh stone wall. 
Tower of the Winds, and market, ye have told 
Tales that long were buried in the hidden fold, 
The many centuries' growth of earth and wall, 
But in Greece the new, before the old, must fall. 

There you stand within your violet hill -crown, 

Acropolis, on ruins looking down, 

Where theaters and temples round your base 

Cling close to the vast, towering hill's face, 

Made stronger by a thick, high Turkish wall, 

Built from fragments of the Parthenon's sad fall; 

Nor can time, nor enemy destroy the rest. 

In Athena's home much lingers, to the west, 

All that double row of columns on the front. 

The middle walls and pillars bore the brunt 

Of explosives stored by careless Turkish hands, 

Lit by bombs from Venice's besieging bands. 

The Parthenon ! The Parthenon ! A mad, 

Unreasoning fury comes, a dreaming sad 

Of what you once were, what you still might be, 

If only Greece from Turks had e'er been free; 

Stately, though broken; beauteous, though half -rent* 

Wondrous in strength and power, never spent. 

No man could look upon your glorious face 



114 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

And, looking, say you needed one more grace. 

And turning round, another temple fair, 

But slender, smaller, with Ionic air, 

The tomb of Erectheon joyous stands, 

As if to lead the soul to fairer lands ; 

'Twere hard to find on earth a brighter plain, 

A bluer sea, or more aspiring fane. 

By the Propylsea, columned, massive gate, 

Is the temple where an old man once did wait 

For white or black sails, winging home from Crete. 

Where Theseus and the Minotaur did meet. 

Black sails Mgseus saw : his son was dead ! 

The cliff below was soon his dying bed. 

He leaped the parapet : forgetfulness 

To change the sails: for Athens, one man less. 

The " Wingless Victory " temple to the sea 

Looks ever, wondering how old is he, 

For in blue and shining radiance he lay 

From her first remembrance unto this new day. 

The unfruitful sea ! What traces you do wear 
Of all life's varied happenings you bear 
Across your waves ? No message can we trace 
Upon your vast and ever-changing face. 
A tiny piece of land holds all the story. 
You toss your weather-beaten, long locks hoary; 
Perhaps you tell it all in unknown tongue. 
Each wave that on the hard sand beach is flung 



the varied grace of nature's face. us 

May be a chapter from an epic, wrought 
By all the battles on the wide sea fought, 
And every wave that gently slips along 
In summertide may murmur a sweet song 
Of galleys decked in purple and rich gold, 
The splendor of the Greeks and Romans old. 
Yet we can grasp the story of the land ; 
It slips not ever from our questioning hand — 
'Tis not the same wave, but the self-same stone 
That wears upon it each past century's tone. 



SUNRISE OFF CONSTANTINOPLE. 

Dawn was shimmering on the broad wave, 

Day was breaking o'er the sea, 
That Marmora's isles with light did lave, 

And forced gray mists to flee. 

The Asian headlands far off rose ; 

Now up above the foam 
Of Bosphorus, there radiant glows 

Each shining snowy dome, 

Each minaret-point of sparkling gold 

'Mid gardens green and fair, 
That all the wealth of tints enfold 

In shades deep, warm and rare. 



lie the varied grace oe nature's Face. 

A stairway grand on either bank 
Of the winding Golden Horn — 

Palaces, mosques high, rank on rank, 
Jewels that might adorn 

A way leading up to Allah's throne 
From emerald wave to turquois crest, 

Each step a shining, snowy stone, 
Which no earthly feet have pressed ; 

Set deep in lapis-lazuli green, 

The glancing sky tint of sparkling beryl, 
'Mid alabaster's transparent sheen, 

And the tear-drop clouds of misty pearl. 

O, Constantinople, the shrine of the East, 
Mirrored fair in the shimmering sea, 

All breathless we bow at this rich color feast 
Too softly enchanting to be. 

ALEXANDRIA. 

[EGYPT.] 

Out of the sea there rises 

A stretch of yellow sand — 
One of those swift surprises, 

The first faint sight of land. 
No mountains towering upward, 

No cliffs bleak on the shore, 
But only a desert landward 



The Varied grace of nature's face. n? 

And the delta's field-decked floor; 
Only a modern city 

Despoiled of its ancient fame, 
Once the seat of brave and witty, 

In far lands full great in name. 
Built in a sunny corner 

Where sea, desert and delta meet, 
All the wealth of the Nile to adorn her, 

Was laid at her proud white feet. 
To Ptolemy first, scholars seeking, 

Sailed to that long unknown shore 
Where, in Egypt, Greek rulers were speaking, 

Who had opened the land's long-closed door. 
From all countries the kings sought to borrow 

Much valued, historical pages, 
Which to the world's infinite sorrow 

Are lost to enquiring ages. 
The greatest books Ptolemy treasured, 

To the owners sent copies well-penned, 
With a sum of gold, carefully measured, 

That complaints they might never dare send. 
Its volumes by thousands were numbered, 

With worth far too great to be known. 
When eleven Greek Ptolemies slumbered 

To a wonder world-wide it had grown. 

Cleopatra, not the least of your mad wiles 
In result, came to pass, on that day 



118 THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 

When Csesar, urged on by your false smiles, 

Burned your brother's armed fleet in the bay. 
'Twas war time : the red galleys floated 

To the shore, the hot fire soon spread — 
All was lost of the library noted, 

On the world's riches fast the flames fed. 
From your granaries you squandered the corn-wealth ; 

From your people you taxed the last breath, 
Not for buildings, for army, for truth, health, 

But a song and a dance to the death. 
'Tis not your mad life that I most mourn, 

Nor the heroes whose cards you did play, 
But peasants, poor, half-clothed, forlorn, 

And armies you turned in a day. 
The face of the conflict you oft changed, 

*In Asia, in Rome, and in Greece, 
Your influence o'er the wide seas ranged, 

In the end, only death brought you peace. 

We wander through narrow, bright highways — 

They say 'tis Mahomet's birthday — 
Down crowded and noisy, dark byways, 

Hung with lamps, flags and broad awnings gay; 
In the midst, Pompey's Pillar, the only 

Tall monument left on the sand : 
Thoughtless present, and gray past so lonely 

Mingling close, at the gates of the land. 



THE VARIED GRACE OF NATURE'S FACE. 119 

NATURE'S SONG. 

Each life is but a tone 

In Nature's perfect song. 
We each can do alone 

Our part in the great throng ; 

Alone, but in the song so great 

A place it well must hold, 
Adding one more tone to create 

A melody of gold. 

Each life adds something more 

To Nature's endless tune, 
A thought, a word, to pour 

In joyous notes, that soon 

Swell louder as the nations grow 

In heart, in mind, in soul, 
Rising to high notes from the low, 

To make the perfect whole. 



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